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Robot massage company, Aescape Inc, goes bust with shortfall of $157 million
US-based robotics wellness company Aescape Inc has entered insolvency proceedings following the sale of substantially all of its assets and escalating financial pressures.
A notice issued by Insolvency Services Group confirms that Aescape, Inc executed a General Assignment for the benefit of creditors on 3 April 2026, appointing it to oversee the wind-down.
The move follows a foreclosure process linked to defaults on a secured loan originally held by Silicon Valley Bank (SVB).
Founded in 2017, Aescape Inc developed AI-assisted robotic massage tables and operated across partner locations in the US. The business had been in a transition phase, moving from pre-revenue development to commercial operations in 2024, but early trading delivered only modest revenues against a high capital cost base.
According to the filing, the company’s financial position deteriorated under the weight of “very high capital investment and expense burdens”, leading to substantial losses. SVB issued a notice of default in December 2025, with the secured loan balance at no less than US$11.8m at that time.
The debt was subsequently acquired by Black Stag Lending, which provided an additional US$5m revolving facility to support operations during a transition period. However, Aescape Inc was unable to cure its defaults and a public foreclosure sale was held on 30 January 2026, with a single bidder – Aescape Recovery Inc – acquiring the entirety of company’s assets for a credit bid of US$16.6m.
Following the transaction, Aescape Inc was left as an “assetless shell”, prompting directors to initiate the assignment process. At the time of filing, the company still owed approximately US$4.55m to Black Stag, alongside unsecured debts totalling around US$152.6m, including US$136.8m in unsecured convertible notes.
Creditors have been warned that, given the prior foreclosure on substantially all assets, it is unlikely there will be any meaningful recovery for unsecured claims.
Aescape Inc had been positioned as a pioneering player in the convergence of wellness and automation, with Spa Business previously reporting on its ambition to scale robotic massage technology within the spa and wellness sector.
The concept – combining AI, data capture and consistent treatment delivery – attracted significant industry interest, as operators explored tech-enabled recovery solutions, however, the collapse highlights the challenges of capital-intensive innovation where long development cycles and high hardware costs combine with a high-risk model.
Creditors have until 30 September 2026 to submit claims.
Aescape Recovery Inc continues to trade using the original Aescape Inc assets.
Aescape Inc founder, Eric Litman, left the company in earlier this year and launched a new start-up called Healthspanners in March.
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