Hannover Messe 2026 may have fallen short of the previous attendance count, but it was still packed with plenty to digest. Of course, Artificial Intelligence (AI) was the standout across nearly all solution types. However, the way it is being marketed and commercialized is changing to meet the real-world problems that industrial organizations face.
The ABI Research team once again made the trip to Germany to connect with the biggest tech players on the planet. Here are just some of the key takeaways from the show.
Industrial AI Shows Real-World Operational Gains
Over the last year, industrial AI has been riding the hype train. At Hannover Messe this year, technology vendors demonstrated measurable results—not general use cases. AI was seen across virtually every booth, covering everything from Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs) and Manufacturing Execution Systems (MESs) to robotics and smart energy solutions.
Several standouts include:
- Siemens’ Eigen Engineering Agent uses natural language prompting to generate a virtual PLC. This capability is useful for enabling software-defined automation, especially in light of a tight labor market.
- Zebra’s AI-enabled barcode scanner sidesteps the need to scan each barcode individually. The solution uses picture-based batch reading to reduce barcode reading tasks from 2 minutes to 20 seconds.
- Tulip’s AI-tagged video analytics solution creates assembly/service instructions via video recording. It also automatically tags videos to make them easily searchable in a customer’s database. Using Vision Language Models (VLMs), the technology can save manufacturers hours of scouring through production or security footage when trying to analyze past events.
A Digital Thread Is a Key Lever of Industrial AI Value
Building a digital thread was showcased as a way to bridge the gap between data challenges and harnessing advanced AI tools. Manufacturers largely contend with data silos, prohibiting the full value of Agentic AI from being realized.
At Hannover, Research Analyst Carter Gordon noted that “AWS, PTC, and Siemens each hosted demonstrations on how data flow from design conception through to production, focusing on the seamless and automatic transfer of data between applications.” He continues, “The result was a fundamental message on how foundationally digitalizing operations and connecting data silos to develop a comprehensive digital thread is the key to streamlining operations, with Agentic AI being a tool to help realize and benefit from this process.”
Smaller vendors like AVEVA, Cognite, Crosser, and HighByte were very focused on the importance of data contextualization and orchestration. So the conversation has shifted to what data thread can enable industrial companies to do—with agentic applications being a key piece of the pie.
Vision-Language-Action Models Signal the Next Phase of Industrial Robotics
Hannover Messe 2026 showed that the robotics industry is entering a new phase shaped by AI, rather than hardware alone. Chinese companies dominated the show floor with large numbers of low-cost humanoid robots and Collaborative Robots (cobots), highlighting China’s growing lead in robotics manufacturing and scale. However, the most important development came from a quieter demonstration on the Siemens booth. Two Universal Robots cobot arms used a Vision-Language-Action (VLA) model to pack and unpack soft clothing items inside a flexible bag. Unlike traditional robots, the system could adapt in real time to shifting fabric and changing object positions without being reset.
This type of technology is widely viewed as the building blocks for general-purpose robotics and Physical AI. It allows robots to handle unpredictable environments that cannot be solved with fixed programming alone. The demonstration suggested that the future of robotics will depend less on building humanoid hardware and more on developing intelligent AI systems that can generalize across tasks. Many in the industry now believe commercial maturity for these systems could arrive within the next 2 years.
Senior Robotics Analyst George Chowdhury reflects on this year’s show:
“For me, one question is the most burning. When will VLA models be commercially mature? This is akin to asking when will Physical AI and humanoids deliver on their promise—the most likely answer is in 2 years’ time. Then, the robotics showing at Hannover Messe will be a much bigger affair.”
Get More Insights from Hanover Messe 2026
Industrial AI and robotics weren’t the only technologies making major headlines at Hannover Messe 2026. Our analyst team also covered the latest in smart energy, warehousing, and analytics. Read our new whitepaper, Hannover Messe 2026: What the Show Revealed About Industrial AI, Robotics, and Energy for our full list of takeaways.
Carter Gordon