An AGV, or Automated Guided Vehicle, usually follows fixed or predefined routes. An AMR, or Autonomous Mobile Robot, navigates more flexibly using sensors, software, maps, and obstacle detection. KUKA explains that AGVs and AMRs are designed for similar transport tasks but differ in flexibility, infrastructure needs, and scalability.
The right choice depends on your factory layout, transport routes, payload, traffic, safety needs, software integration, budget, and long-term automation goals.
This guide will help you decide whether an AGV or AMR is better for your factory automation project.
What Is an AGV?
An Automated Guided Vehicle is a driverless vehicle used to move materials along a defined route.
AGVs are commonly used for:
- Pallet transport
- Raw material movement
- Finished goods movement
- Assembly line feeding
- Heavy-load transport
- Repetitive point-to-point delivery
- Work-in-progress movement
AGVs often rely on guidance systems such as magnetic tape, wires, reflectors, QR codes, floor markers, or programmed paths.
AGVs are best when your factory has stable, repetitive, and predictable material movement.
What Is an AMR?
An Autonomous Mobile Robot is a mobile robot that can move through a facility with more independence.
AMRs usually use:
- LiDAR
- Cameras
- Sensors
- SLAM mapping
- Fleet management software
- Obstacle detection
- Wireless communication
- Dynamic route planning
A 2024 review of AMRs explains that AMRs can make decisions and do not need previously installed navigation infrastructure in the same way as traditional AGVs. The same review notes that AMRs can reduce the time and effort workers spend on repetitive material movement.
AMRs are best when your factory needs flexible, scalable, and dynamic material movement.
Why Choosing the Right AGV or AMR Matters
Choosing the wrong system can create unnecessary cost, workflow disruption, and poor ROI.
Step 1: Define Your Material Flow Problem
Start by identifying the exact transport problem.
Common factory material flow problems include:
- Workers spending too much time walking
- Forklifts creating congestion
- Production lines waiting for parts
- Manual transport causing delays
- Materials arriving late at workstations
- Finished goods movement slowing dispatch
- Work-in-progress items waiting between processes
- Lack of visibility into internal transport
If your problem is a fixed repetitive movement, an AGV may be enough.
If your problem involves changing routes, multiple pickup points, or mixed traffic, an AMR may be better.
Step 2: Understand Your Load Requirements
The robot must match the material being moved.
Review:
- Load weight
- Load size
- Load shape
- Pallet type
- Cart type
- Tote or bin type
- Pickup height
- Drop-off height
- Stability of the load
- Need for lifting or towing
Choose AGV when:
- Loads are heavy and repetitive
- Movement happens between fixed points
- Pallet or cart movement is predictable
- The same route is used repeatedly
Choose AMR when:
- Loads vary
- Delivery points change
- The robot must move between multiple work zones
- The process needs flexible routing
Step 3: Study Your Factory Routes
Routes are one of the biggest factors in choosing between AGV and AMR.
AGV is better for:
- Fixed routes
- Repetitive loops
- Point-to-point movement
- Stable factory layouts
- Defined lanes
- Predictable traffic
AMR is better for:
- Dynamic routes
- Multi-point delivery
- Changing workflows
- Shared spaces with workers
- Flexible production cells
- Smart factory operations
If your factory has the same route every day, an AGV can work well. If routes change based on production demand, an AMR usually gives more flexibility.
Step 4: Review Your Factory Layout
Your factory layout affects robot selection.
Check:
- Aisle width
- Turning radius
- Floor condition
- Slopes
- Doorways
- Lifts or elevators
- Pedestrian zones
- Forklift zones
- Charging locations
- Pickup and drop-off points
- Emergency exits
AGVs may require physical route infrastructure. AMRs usually require less physical infrastructure, but they still need suitable floors, safe traffic rules, and reliable navigation conditions.
A poor layout can reduce the performance of both AGVs and AMRs.
Step 5: Check Infrastructure Requirements
AGVs may need more physical setup.
This can include:
- Magnetic tape
- Embedded wires
- Reflectors
- QR codes
- Floor markers
- Defined lanes
- Route protection
AMRs usually depend more on digital maps, sensors, software, and fleet coordination.
This is one reason AMRs are often preferred in facilities that want automation without major changes to floors or fixed infrastructure.
However, AMRs still need:
- Good mapping
- Safe traffic design
- Reliable connectivity
- Clear pickup and drop-off zones
- Proper charging areas
- Worker training
Step 6: Evaluate Obstacle Handling
Factory floors are rarely empty.
Robots may need to operate around:
- Workers
- Forklifts
- Carts
- Pallets
- Machines
- Temporary obstacles
- Packaging material
- Maintenance activity
AGVs typically stop when an obstacle blocks their route. This is safe, but it can create delays.
AMRs can often detect obstacles and calculate a new route. This makes AMRs useful in dynamic environments where traffic is less predictable.
For factories with busy mixed traffic, obstacle handling is a major decision factor.
Step 7: Review Safety Requirements
Safety must be part of the selection process from the beginning.
ISO 3691-4 specifies safety requirements and verification methods for driverless industrial trucks and includes examples such as automated guided vehicles, autonomous mobile robots, bots, automated guided carts, tunnel tuggers, and under-cart systems.
Before choosing AGV or AMR, review:
- Pedestrian routes
- Robot speed limits
- Emergency stop systems
- Warning lights and sounds
- Safety scanners
- Obstacle detection
- Traffic intersections
- Loading and unloading points
- Forklift interaction
- Worker training
- Maintenance procedures
The safest robot is not only the one with sensors. It is the one deployed with proper traffic design, risk assessment, and operator training.
Step 8: Review Software Integration Needs
Modern factory automation depends on software connectivity.
Your AGV or AMR may need to integrate with:
- ERP
- MES
- WMS
- WCS
- Fleet management software
- Barcode scanners
- RFID systems
- Conveyor controls
- Production scheduling systems
- Automatic doors
- Lifts or elevators
- Machine interfaces
AMRs often depend more heavily on fleet management and dynamic task assignment. AGVs may be simpler in fixed-route projects, but they may still require integration with factory systems.
A 2026 ITPro analysis notes that industrial autonomous robotics is moving from isolated trials toward scalable integrations, with real value coming from how well robots connect with broader operational systems.
This means you should not only ask, “Which robot is better?”
You should also ask, “Which robot integrates better with our factory workflow?”
Step 9: Compare Total Cost of Ownership
Do not compare only robot purchase price.
The total cost of ownership includes:
- Robot hardware
- Navigation infrastructure
- Software license
- Fleet management platform
- Installation
- Integration
- Safety systems
- Facility modifications
- Charging stations
- Maintenance
- Spare parts
- Worker training
- Technical support
- Downtime during deployment
AGV cost may be better when:
- Routes are simple
- Infrastructure is already available
- The process is stable
- Loads are repetitive
- There are few route changes
AMR cost may be better when:
- Layout changes often
- Routes are dynamic
- Infrastructure modification is expensive
- You need easy scalability
- You want flexible deployment
The right financial decision depends on long-term value, not only initial cost.
Step 10: Calculate ROI Before Deployment
A good AGV or AMR project should improve measurable business outcomes.
Track these before and after automation:
| KPI | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Manual transport hours | Measures labor time saved |
| Material delivery time | Measures flow improvement |
| Production waiting time | Shows impact on line availability |
| Forklift movements | Tracks congestion reduction |
| Worker walking distance | Measures non-value-added movement |
| Robot utilization | Shows fleet productivity |
| Delivery accuracy | Measures process reliability |
| Safety incidents | Tracks safety impact |
| Downtime | Measures operational disruption |
| ROI/payback period | Shows financial value |
Simple ROI formula:
ROI = Net Annual Benefit ÷ Total Automation Investment × 100
Net annual benefit may include labor savings, reduced delays, higher throughput, fewer errors, lower forklift dependency, and improved safety.
Step 11: Choose Based on Use Case
Choose AGV for These Use Cases
AGVs are a strong fit for:
- Repetitive pallet movement
- Fixed assembly line feeding
- Raw material transport
- Finished goods transfer
- Heavy-load movement
- Stable warehouse routes
- Predictable manufacturing loops
AGV or AMR Decision Checklist
| Question | Choose AGV If… | Choose AMR If… |
|---|---|---|
| Are routes fixed? | Yes | No |
| Does the layout change often? | No | Yes |
| Is the load heavy and repetitive? | Yes | Sometimes |
| Is traffic unpredictable? | No | Yes |
| Do you need dynamic rerouting? | No | Yes |
| Do you want less physical infrastructure? | No | Yes |
| Is the process simple and repetitive? | Yes | Sometimes |
| Do you need multi-point delivery? | Limited | Yes |
| Is smart factory integration important? | Sometimes | Yes |
| Do you need fast scalability? | Limited | Yes |
FAQs
1. How do I choose between AGV and AMR?
Choose AGV for fixed, repetitive routes. Choose AMR for flexible, changing routes and dynamic factory environments.
2. Which is better for factory automation, AGV or AMR?
Neither is always better. AGVs are better for predictable transport, while AMRs are better for flexible and scalable workflows.
3. Are AMRs more expensive than AGVs?
AMRs may have higher software and technology costs, but they can reduce physical infrastructure needs. AGVs may be cost-effective for simple fixed routes.
4. Do AGVs need magnetic tape?
Some AGVs use magnetic tape, but others may use wires, reflectors, QR codes, laser guidance, or programmed routes.
5. Do AMRs need fixed routes?
AMRs usually do not need fixed physical routes. They use sensors, maps, and software to navigate more dynamically.
6. Can AGVs and AMRs work in the same factory?
Yes. Some factories use AGVs for repetitive heavy-load transport and AMRs for flexible multi-point movement.
7. What safety standard applies to AGVs and AMRs?
ISO 3691-4 covers safety requirements and verification methods for driverless industrial trucks, including AGVs and AMRs.
8. What should I check before buying an AGV or AMR?
Check payload, route complexity, layout, floor condition, traffic, safety requirements, software integration, charging needs, support, and ROI.
