NVIDIA has turned its years of self-driving car engineering toward the robots that increasingly share our warehouses, hospitals and assembly lines. Announced on June 22, 2026, Halos for Robotics is pitched as a full-stack safety system — one that stitches together AI compute, system software, sensor data, safety applications and inspection into a single, coherent framework.
The logic is simple: a robot arm, a delivery bot or an autonomous forklift needs to fail gracefully, not catastrophically. NVIDIA argues it already solved much of this problem elsewhere, claiming Halos draws on more than 18,600 engineering years of autonomous vehicle safety development. Rather than reinventing those guardrails for every new humanoid or mobile platform, developers get a ready-made foundation.
Halos isn’t a single box — it’s a layered stack. Here’s how the pieces fit together:
- IGX Thor — the industrial AI compute hardware at the heart of the system. Crucially, it provides an IEC 61508 SIL 3 capable platform safety level, achieved through a dedicated Safety Island that isolates and supervises critical functions.
- Holoscan Sensor Bridge — handles sensor connectivity, feeding cameras, lidar and other inputs into the compute layer with the low latency safety-critical decisions demand.
- Halos OS — the safety software that ties the applications together and governs how the system behaves when something goes wrong.
- Halos AI Systems Inspection — a certification preparation program designed to help teams get their robots through the regulatory wringer.
That SIL 3 rating is the headline for anyone building robots that operate near people. The IEC 61508 functional-safety standard is the language regulators and insurers speak, and a Safety Island that can hit SIL 3 means manufacturers don’t have to bolt on a separate safety controller to satisfy it. The hardware itself is doing the watching.
The inspection program is an underrated part of the picture. Getting a robotic system certified is often slower and more painful than building it, and NVIDIA positioning Halos AI Systems Inspection as a structured path toward compliance suggests it understands that the bottleneck for commercial robotics is rarely raw capability — it’s proving the thing is safe enough to deploy.
For now, access is limited. Halos Core for IGX is available in early access for developers, so this is a foundation builders can start working against rather than a finished product on a shelf. NVIDIA has not disclosed pricing.
The broader play here is clear enough. As humanoid robots and autonomous machines move from demo reels into real workplaces, the companies that supply the safety plumbing stand to become as indispensable as the ones supplying the brains. With Halos, NVIDIA is trying to be both.