
Kodiak (NASDAQ:KDK) and Bosch, the world’s largest automotive supplier, have entered into a strategic agreement to co-develop a production-grade, redundant autonomous trucking platform.
The collaboration is a major step toward moving self-driving technology from the pilot phase into large-scale commercial manufacturing.
The agreement focuses on integrating Bosch’s high-performance hardware, including automotive-grade sensors and vehicle actuation systems, with Kodiak’s specialized firmware and "Kodiak Driver" software stack.
This unified platform is designed to be "factory-ready," allowing truck manufacturers (OEMs) and upfitters to integrate autonomous capabilities directly onto the assembly line.
While Kodiak has already deployed driverless trucks in commercial operations, achieving true scale requires a robust, automotive-grade supply chain.
Bosch will supply critical components, including advanced steering technologies and motion sensors, that provide the hardware-level redundancy necessary for safety-critical driverless missions.
The partnership will take center stage this week in Las Vegas.
A Kodiak Driver-powered truck, featuring the integrated Bosch technology, will be on display at the Bosch booth (#16203, Central Hall) during CES 2026, which runs from January 6 to January 9.
The exhibit aims to demonstrate the "redundant-by-design" philosophy of the platform.
By combining Bosch’s high-reliability components with Kodiak’s "Actuation Control Engine" (ACE), the system is engineered to maintain control and perform safe fallback maneuvers even if individual hardware components fail.