
Revenue
$7.00M
2024
Funding
$3.50M
2024
Revenue
Sacra estimates that Sorting Robotics generated $7 million in revenue in 2024, with management forecasting $11 million in revenue for full-year 2025.
The company's revenue is primarily derived from sales of robotics equipment, including the Stardust machine, priced at $250,000, and the Jiko infusion robot, priced at $90,000.
Sorting Robotics has sold approximately 30 Stardust machines and hundreds of lower-priced units since introducing its first cannabis robot in 2021. Key customers include Stiiizy, which reported $800 million in 2024 sales, Canada-based Tilray with $788 million in revenue, and regional operators such as Blue Fox Brands.
Valuation
Sorting Robotics has raised $3.5 million in total funding since its founding in 2019. The company completed a $500,000 equity crowdfunding round in April 2024, following earlier seed funding rounds of $2.6 million and $150,000 from Y Combinator's Winter 2019 batch.
Investors include Y Combinator, Splash Capital, Night Owl Ventures, Genesis Ventures, Prospeq, and KISO Capital.
Product
Sorting Robotics is a cannabis manufacturing automation company that develops robots to replace labor-intensive steps in pre-roll production.
The company's Stardust product uses a Kawasaki 6-axis robotic arm with computer vision to coat pre-rolled joints with kief, producing 1,500 joints per hour with one human operator.
The Jiko robot injects THC concentrate into pre-rolls through a heated, pressure-regulated system, infusing 1,000 joints per hour with precise dosing.
The Omnifiller automates vape cartridge filling, processing 6,000 cartridges per hour. All machines integrate with LAKA, the company's production analytics platform, which tracks cycle counts, quality metrics, and maintenance needs in real time.
Cannabis manufacturers load pre-rolls into specialized fixtures, select infusion recipes on touchscreen interfaces, and monitor production through integrated cameras and sensors.
The robots apply concentrates, adhesives, and kief with precision, replacing tasks that would otherwise require manual labor. Sorting Robotics also produces MoonGlue, a food-grade rolling adhesive designed for both manual and automated application.
Business Model
Sorting Robotics operates a B2B hardware-plus-software model, selling manufacturing equipment directly to licensed cannabis producers.
The company generates revenue through upfront equipment sales, priced between $90,000 for the Jiko and $250,000 for the Stardust, along with recurring income from consumables, maintenance, and software subscriptions.
The business model is shaped by the cannabis industry's regulatory constraints, which prohibit interstate commerce and require manufacturers to establish production facilities in each state where they operate.
This dynamic creates multiple sales opportunities as multi-state operators expand their operations. The company's gross margins exceed 50%, driven by the specialized nature of cannabis manufacturing equipment and limited competition in automation.
Sorting Robotics operates with a team of 20 employees and achieves profitability through high-margin equipment sales and recurring revenue streams, including consumables such as MoonGlue adhesive.
Its vertically integrated approach, which includes custom engineering services for complete production lines, enables the company to capture a larger share of customer capital expenditure budgets while embedding its control software as the production orchestration layer.
Competition
Vertically integrated automation providers
STM Canna and Canapa by Paxiom offer integrated pre-roll production lines that consolidate multiple manufacturing steps into single systems.
STM Canna's RocketBox Pro, priced at $59,900, processes 5,000 pre-rolls per hour across five stations, presenting a cost advantage over Sorting Robotics' specialized machines. These companies market themselves as comprehensive solutions for manufacturers seeking to avoid the complexities of integrating equipment from multiple vendors, which could constrain Sorting Robotics' ability to sell standalone machines.
Accelerant Manufacturing has adopted a Production-as-a-Service model that replaces upfront capital expenditures with a per-joint production fee. This model converts equipment costs into variable operating expenses and includes annual hardware updates, directly challenging the traditional equipment sales model that underpins Sorting Robotics' high-margin revenue streams.
Specialized rolling and filling equipment
RollPros Blackbird and GreenBroz Holy Roller concentrate on rolling and cone-filling processes, excluding post-production infusion and coating.
RollPros' TruRoll system rolls joints from paper instead of filling pre-made cones, achieving unit costs of $0.03 while offering cloud-based production analytics. These competitors focus on high-volume, low-margin segments of pre-roll manufacturing, where Sorting Robotics' specialized infusion capabilities may not be required.
Traditional tobacco equipment manufacturers
Körber, a German company with $3.2 billion in annual sales, has been a leader in cigarette manufacturing for 79 years and recently expanded into hemp production. Its machines can roll 5,000 joints per minute at a cost of two cents each.
Although large-scale tobacco manufacturers have historically avoided cannabis due to federal illegality, their entry into the market could introduce significant scale efficiencies and decades of expertise, potentially commoditizing the manufacturing processes that Sorting Robotics currently automates at premium price points.
TAM Expansion
Product line extension
Sorting Robotics is expanding its offerings from infusion and coating to full production line automation through the Mayweather pick-and-pack robot and custom integration services.
The LAKA software platform enables subscription-based analytics and remote monitoring across multiple machines. By incorporating upstream processes such as grinding and downstream packaging, Sorting Robotics can capture a larger share of customer capital budgets while increasing switching costs through integrated workflows.
The MoonGlue consumables business illustrates how specialized chemistry and materials can drive recurring revenue. Expanding into additional consumables, such as specialized papers, filters, and packaging materials, could establish ongoing revenue streams with existing equipment customers.
Geographic market expansion
As of now, 11 U.S. states do not have adult-use cannabis programs, with each new market presenting greenfield manufacturing opportunities.
Internationally, Germany's anticipated 2024 legalization and Canada's evolving regulations for infused products represent potential growth areas. European markets often require CE marking and other safety certifications, creating entry barriers that benefit established automation providers.
Sorting Robotics' expertise in precision dosing and computer vision systems could also be applied to adjacent regulated industries, including pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals, and food manufacturing. These sectors face similar automation challenges, such as handling sticky materials and maintaining consistent product quality.
Customer base diversification
Mid-tier cannabis operators, under margin pressure from oversupply, are increasingly adopting automation to reduce labor costs and improve product consistency.
Labor shortages and high turnover in cannabis manufacturing have also created demand among smaller operators producing fewer than 10,000 joints daily. Sorting Robotics' lower-cost equipment, such as the Jiko, enables it to address this broader market segment beyond large multi-state operators.
Hemp and CBD manufacturers, which operate under different regulatory frameworks, represent an adjacent customer base for automation technology. These companies often face fewer regulatory constraints and can ship products across state lines, potentially supporting larger-scale manufacturing operations that justify higher equipment investments.
Risks
Federal rescheduling: Cannabis rescheduling from Schedule I to Schedule III could enable large tobacco equipment manufacturers, with decades of experience and significant scale advantages, to enter the market. Companies such as Körber already produce cigarette machines capable of manufacturing 20,000 units per minute. This level of efficiency could commoditize the specialized manufacturing processes that currently allow Sorting Robotics' equipment to command premium pricing.
Market fragmentation: State-specific cannabis regulations prevent manufacturers from establishing centralized production facilities and distributing products nationally. This regulatory framework limits the scale efficiencies needed to justify investments in expensive automation equipment. As a result, most cannabis companies remain small and regional, reducing the total addressable market for high-cost manufacturing solutions.
Labor cost dynamics: Wages in cannabis manufacturing remain relatively low compared to the $250,000 capital investment required for machines like Stardust. If labor costs decline further due to an oversupply of workers as the industry matures, the economic case for automation could weaken, particularly among smaller operators who constitute the majority of potential customers.
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