Elon Musk Predicts $30 Trillion From Tesla’s Robots, Calls AI ‘Supersonic Tsunami’
- by eWeek
- Jul 30, 2025
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Elon Musk during X takeover 2025.
Source: Tesla Owners Silicon Valley
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Elon Musk turned heads at a Tesla fan event last weekend in San Mateo, California â not by hyping electric cars, but by pitching a future where humanoid robots drive Teslaâs growth.
Appearing virtually at the Tesla Owners of Silicon Valley âTakeoverâ party, Musk predicted that Teslaâs Optimus robots could one day generate $30 trillion in annual revenue.
âHypothetically, if Tesla was making one billion of these a year⦠maybe on the order of $30,000, Iâm just guessing here, thatâs $30 trillion in revenue,â he said. He followed it up with a dose of realism and continued, âLong way to go between here and making one billion robots a year.”
The shift in Teslaâs focus highlights how quickly and deeply the tech giant is pivoting toward AI-driven robotics. Musk called robots âprobably the worldâs biggest product.â He estimated a market for 20 billion of them, which is more than twice the number of smartphones on the planet today.
AI is the engine behind Teslaâs robot future
Teslaâs Optimus robot is currently on its third version, which Musk said is finally ready for volume production. A few hundred units are expected by the end of 2025, with a more aggressive ramp-up planned for 2026. The reason for the delay? A redesign of the robotâs architecture, aimed at making it more scalable.
But hardware is only part of the story. The real enabler behind Optimus and Teslaâs broader strategy is AI.
âIâve never seen any technology advance as fast as AI,â Musk said, describing it as a âsupersonic tsunami.â That same AI is already behind Teslaâs self-driving technology, and now itâs driving the companyâs push into robotics, too. A recent deal with Samsung to produce Tesla-designed chips for both self-driving and robotics efforts speaks to how serious this play is.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang also sees a future consumer market for humanoid robots. Others, like Futurumâs Shay Boloor, note that the world currently spends $50 trillion annually on human labor; this makes robots a potentially massive disruption if companies can âconquer it.â
Speculation meets stock price
Events like the Takeover may look like fan gatherings, but they often serve as retail investor roadshows. Unlike other megacaps, more than 40% of Teslaâs shares are held by retail investors, which is nearly double the rate of most of the Magnificent Seven, which include Tesla, Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, NVIDIA, Meta, and Amazon.
That optimism is reflected in Teslaâs sky-high valuation. Shares trade at roughly 180 times estimated 2025 earnings, second only to Palantir. While the companyâs stock dipped following earnings last week, it bounced back 3% Monday, boosted in part by the Samsung chip announcement.
Humanoid robots could supercharge enterprise IT demand
Whether Muskâs humanoid robot dreams ever reach the trillion-dollar mark is anyoneâs guess. But if Tesla and other major players start seriously scaling robot production, itâs going to boost the demand for GPUs, custom silicon, edge devices, and cloud capacity. That means more infrastructure to build, manage, and secure, putting MSPs, cloud solution providers, and systems integrators squarely in the path of opportunity and pressure.
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