Appetronix
Appetronix is a technology company.
Financial History
Appetronix has raised $10.0M across 1 funding round.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding has Appetronix raised?
Appetronix has raised $10.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Appetronix is a technology company.
Appetronix has raised $10.0M across 1 funding round.
Appetronix has raised $10.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Appetronix has raised $10.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Appetronix's investors include AlleyCorp, Baukunst, Humba Ventures, Ravelin Capital, Ubiquity Ventures, Village Global.
Appetronix is a Toronto-based foodtech company developing fully autonomous robotic kitchens for quick-service restaurants in high-traffic locations like airports, hospitals, and universities.[1][2][5] It builds compact, AI-powered systems using proprietary robotics, such as the RoWok™ wok for made-to-order meals, enabling 24/7 operations with zero onsite employees, 100% uptime via predictive maintenance, and meals ready in 4 minutes.[1][2] The company serves hospitality operators facing labor shortages, solving issues of high costs, inconsistent quality, and limited hours by delivering authentic food through automation while operating on a revenue-sharing model with brands and operators.[5]
Founded in 2020, Appetronix has gained early traction, including a robotic pizza kitchen launch with Donatos Pizza at Columbus International Airport, and raised over $10M in seed funding to scale across non-commercial foodservice markets.[3][5]
Appetronix, formerly SJW Robotics, was founded in 2020 in Toronto, Ontario, by Nipun Sharma, who transitioned from investment banking to the restaurant business, driven by frustrations with labor inefficiencies in foodservice.[2][5] The idea emerged from recognizing the need for full kitchen automation to cut costs and ensure consistency, leading to development of proprietary tech like the RoWok™ automated wok system for high-quality, safe meal prep.[2]
A pivotal moment came with the launch of its first automated pizza kitchen at Columbus International Airport in partnership with Donatos Pizza (460+ US locations) and HMSHost, proving the model's viability for 24/7 fresh food in demanding environments; this success fueled a $6M seed-plus round, bringing total funding to $10M+ led by AlleyCorp and the Grote family.[3][5]
Appetronix rides the robotic food prep wave in a market automating kitchens to combat labor shortages, rising wages, and 24/7 demand in quick-service hospitality.[2][5] Timing aligns with post-pandemic shifts toward contactless, efficient foodservice and AI-robotics maturity, enabling self-contained units in high-traffic non-commercial venues where traditional staffing fails.[1][3]
Market forces like chronic understaffing and cost pressures favor its model, positioning it against partial-automation competitors by offering end-to-end solutions; it influences the ecosystem by partnering with established chains, accelerating adoption and proving ROI through real-world deployments.[5]
Appetronix is primed to expand robotic kitchens beyond pizzas to Asian noodles, Mexican bowls, and cookies, targeting more airports, universities, and venues via deepened Donatos/HMSHost ties and new partners.[5] Trends like advancing AI predictive maintenance and revenue-share economics will propel growth, potentially dominating automated quick-service as labor challenges persist.
Its influence may evolve from pioneer to platform leader, enabling brands to franchise robotics at scale—echoing its core mission to revolutionize restaurants through AI and automation.[1][3]
Appetronix has raised $10.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $10.0M Seed in November 2025.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 1, 2025 | $10.0M Seed | AlleyCorp, Baukunst, Humba Ventures, Ravelin Capital, Ubiquity Ventures, Village Global |