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iRobot debt acquired by contract manufacturer as bankruptcy looms

By Eugene Demaitre | December 1, 2025

iRobot is offering the Roomba Plus 405 Combo robot + AutoWash dock at 50% off for Cyber Week.

The Roomba Plus 405 Combo robot + AutoWash dock is 50% off for Cyber Week. Source: iRobot

The fortunes of one of the few household names in robotics have continued to sink. In a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission last week, iRobot Corp. said that a Chinese company has acquired its debt and that it is still looking for alternatives to bankruptcy.

Santrum Hong Kong Co., a subsidiary of Shenzhen, China-based Picea Robotics Co., has acquired a credit agreement from affiliates of The Carlyle Group worth $190.6 million in principal and interest, said the SEC filing.

“As of November 24, 2025, the company owed Picea $161.5 million for the manufacturing of products, $90.9 million of which was past due,” said iRobot. “The company and Picea are engaged in active discussions regarding a mutually agreeable resolution of the non-payment by the company of amounts owed to Picea.”

In short, iRobot is not currently able to pay its contract manufacturer, which is now also its primary creditor. The Bedford, Mass.-based robotic vacuum company owes a total of more than $350 million.

Roomba maker runs into multiple obstacles

Since 2002, iRobot has sold more than 50 million systems worldwide. In 2016, activist investors pressured the company to sell its defense unit, limiting its ability to diversify.

iRobot’s financial troubles date back to at least 2022, when co-founder and CEO Colin Angle refuted claims that its Roombas might share private information while mapping homes.

Amazon.com Inc. announced plans to acquire iRobot for $1.7 billion, but the U.S. Federal Trade Commission raised antitrust concerns. The company also laid off 10% of its staff in August 2022, blaming them on a restructuring, weak demand, and inflation.

In 2023, the European Union added to iRobot’s antitrust woes, even though the UK Competition and Markets Authority had cleared the transaction. The EU’s preliminary finding indicated that the acquisition “may restrict competition” in the robotic vacuum cleaner market.

At the same time, cheaper models from China and more capable competition from vendors such as Dyson affected iRobot, as did its delayed attempts to get into the robotic lawn mower market. Amazon and iRobot called off their deal in early 2024, leading to more layoffs and Angle’s departure as CEO.

iRobot then named Gary Cohen as CEO that May. In late 2024, iRobot laid off 105 employees, reducing its global workforce by nearly 50% from the start of that year.

In August 2025, iRobot noted that its second-quarter earnings of $127.6 million were down 23.3% year over year. It was burning through its remaining $24.8 million in cash, partly from the Amazon settlement, as of September.

Early last month, the company reported that it had “no sources” of additional capital and that it was exploring its options in the hopes of finding a partner or buyer for the well-known consumer brand.

iRobot quarterly earnings, shown here, have fallen sharply since 2021.

Chart created by Google Gemini and verified by The Robot Report.

iRobot prospects dim

In the SEC filing, iRobot noted that its stock price fell in reaction to its update on its strategic review process. It said a potential bidder withdrew from negotiations in October after offering “a price per share to acquire our company that was significantly lower than the trading price of our stock over the recent months prior to the counterparty’s withdrawal.”

iRobot said it will not provide further updates rather than see its stocks continue to decline. “It is unlikely that our ongoing review of strategic alternatives will result in any transaction being consummated outside of a bankruptcy process,” it acknowledged.

Such a process would result in creditors and stockholders receiving no return, and the company might then have to shut down.

Santrum gave iRobot until Jan. 15, 2026, to provide audited financials and maintain a minimum level of core assets under its loan terms. This delays payment of $5.1 million in interest that was due in Oct. 28.

If the company is unable to meet those conditions, and if Santrum decides not to extend the waiver, Picea could then seize assets, and iRobot would be forced to declare bankruptcy. The Robot Report will continue following developments closely.


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About The Author

Eugene Demaitre

Eugene Demaitre is editorial director of the robotics group at WTWH Media. He was senior editor of The Robot Report from 2019 to 2020 and editorial director of Robotics 24/7 from 2020 to 2023. Prior to working at WTWH Media, Demaitre was an editor at BNA (now part of Bloomberg), Computerworld, TechTarget, and Robotics Business Review.

Demaitre has participated in robotics webcasts, podcasts, and conferences worldwide. He has a master's from the George Washington University and lives in the Boston area.

Comments

  1. Andrew says

    December 2, 2025 at 7:29 am

    If the US didn’t step in and mess up the deal with Amazon. This wouldn’t have happened.

    Honestly, iRobot should sue the US for killing the company. Icing on the cake is that a Chinese company acquire through debt all of iRobot’s patents. Let’s see how the US will spin this into a national security issue.

    Reply
  2. Dirk Diggler says

    December 2, 2025 at 12:49 pm

    I agree this is the US’s fault for messing up the Amazon Deal. It is also management’s fault for not quickly finding and accepting an alternative. A low-ball deal is better than laying off everyone! Plus, a bankruptcy – only to give it away to China! We need The President to step in and fix these issues? Unfortunately, yes. Please, sir! We need your help to keep America safe!!

    Reply
  3. Ken says

    December 3, 2025 at 11:50 am

    Another classic example of the corrupt u s regulators sabotaging an american company, stifling competition they are disgustingly corrupt regulators and the policy of the u. S government destroy shareholder value as they always do the. Regulators need to be held accountable. They should be sued, but the government should not pay the tab. The taxpayers should not pay the tab of these. Criminals

    Reply
  4. Steve says

    December 3, 2025 at 2:43 pm

    Agree. Always happens around an election. SEC does nothing for the little shareholders. Take a look at NRDE (formerly RIDE) and RENO (formerly BHTG). If anyone seriously looked in to what happened to these “companies” they will find they were both Trump and dump shells of corruption and fraud. Shareholders got hosed, and SEC complaints were ignored. The board made out fine, and so did China.

    Reply

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