Manus revenue in Japan Middle East U.S

Diving deeper into

Manus at $90M/year

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with Japan, the Middle East, and the U.S. as its biggest geographic segments by revenue
Analyzed 4 sources

Manus’s revenue mix shows that consumer AI agents are breaking out first in markets that sit outside the core Silicon Valley adoption loop. Japan and the Middle East have a long history of paying for mobile productivity and assistant software, and Manus’s all in one workflow, where a user can ask it to research, browse, fill forms, run code, and make a deck in one session, travels well across those markets without needing a deep local sales force or enterprise procurement motion.

  • Japan fits Manus especially well because the product behaves like a high end digital assistant, not just a chatbot. It can turn a vague request into a finished artifact, which matches demand in a market that has long paid for convenience software and structured workflows.
  • The Middle East and the U.S. point to two different growth engines. In the Middle East, fast moving buyers often adopt new software through direct online spend. In the U.S., Manus is proving it can win attention even while competing against local agent products like Genspark and coding agents like Cognition.
  • This geographic mix also explains why Manus moved its legal center to Singapore and built a U.S. entity. For a product that handles browser sessions, files, and external tools, trust and regulatory optics matter almost as much as raw model quality when selling outside China.

Going forward, the winners in consumer agents will be the companies that turn global demand spikes into durable local footholds before foundation model labs absorb the workflow into their own products. Manus has already shown that distribution can come from borderless online demand. The next step is turning that demand into sticky regional habit and trust.