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iRobot files Chapter 11 bankruptcy for Picea acquisition

iRobot files Chapter 11 bankruptcy for Picea acquisition

Emre ÇıtakbyEmre Çıtak
15 December 2025
in Business, Corporate
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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iRobot, the maker of the Roomba robot vacuum, filed for pre-packaged Chapter 11 bankruptcy on December 14 in Delaware. The 35-year-old company from Bedford, Massachusetts, will be acquired by Shenzhen PICEA Robotics Co., its secured lender and primary contract manufacturer. The deal will give Picea 100 percent of iRobot’s equity and cancel all issued and outstanding common stock, leaving existing shareholders with no recovery.

Court filings show iRobot’s estimated assets and liabilities range from $100 million to $500 million. The company plans to complete the court-supervised process by February 2026. After that, iRobot will operate as a private company fully owned by Picea and delist from Nasdaq.

The filing follows a sharp decline after Amazon dropped its $1.7 billion acquisition of iRobot in January 2024 due to opposition from European Union regulators. iRobot received a $94 million termination fee. It then cut 31 percent of its workforce and saw founder Colin Angle resign as CEO.

iRobot’s cash reserves dropped below $25 million by the third quarter of 2025. In early December, Carlyle Group sold about $191 million of iRobot’s outstanding debt to Santrum, a subsidiary of Picea. iRobot also owed Picea $161.5 million in trade payables, including $90.9 million past due. These moves put more than $350 million in claims under Picea’s control.

“Today’s announcement marks a pivotal milestone in securing iRobot’s long-term future,” said Gary Cohen, iRobot’s CEO, in a statement. “By combining iRobot’s innovation, consumer-driven design, and R&D with Picea’s history of innovation, manufacturing, and technical expertise, we believe iRobot will be well equipped to shape the next era of smart home robotics.”

iRobot will keep operating normally during bankruptcy. It expects no interruptions to app functionality, customer programs, or product support. The company filed motions to continue payments to employees, vendors, and creditors.

Picea, founded in 2016, employs more than 7,000 people worldwide. It has produced over 20 million robotic vacuum cleaners and holds more than 1,300 intellectual property rights globally.

Tags: irobotpicea
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Emre Çıtak

Emre Çıtak

Emre’s love for animals made him a veterinarian, and his passion for technology made him an editor. Making new discoveries in the field of editorial and journalism, Emre enjoys conveying information to a wide audience, which has always been a dream for him.

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