18 April 2026
Arrive AI Inc.
10-K / April 15, 2026
Arrive AI Inc.
What the company does
Arrive AI is an early-stage technology company building infrastructure and a platform for Autonomous Last Mile (ALM) delivery using drones and robotic systems. Its core offering is the Arrive Point™ network — a set of smart lockers and mini-cross-docks that enable secure, asynchronous exchange of packages among people, drones/robots, delivery providers, retailers, and consumers.
Platform and products
- Arrive Point Network (Network-as-a-Service): smart locker and mini-cross-dock locations providing secure exchange, temperature control options, and chain-of-custody features.
- ALM Marketplace: dynamic scheduling, pricing, and space optimization across the network.
- AI Services: edge computing on AP4/AP5 devices and analytics for reverse logistics, routing density/arbitrage, growth forecasting, and device-level human interactions.
- Product generations: multi-generational Arrive Points (AP3, AP4, AP5) designed for compatibility with major drone and robotic systems and equipped for secure custody and temperature-controlled handling.
Business model
The company’s revenue approach has three pillars:
- Arrive Point Network (Network-as-a-Service): subscription fees (monthly/annual), plus installation, support, and maintenance revenue.
- AI Services: monetization of transactional and environmental data through machine learning and analytics.
- ALM Marketplace: dynamic pricing and space optimization transactions across the network.
The five-year plan targets deployment of 100,000 Arrive Points, with revenue expected to be roughly split between Network-as-a-Service and Marketplace & AI Services.
Market approach and traction
- Initial commercial focus on medical and logistics customers, with pilot programs conducted with a regional hospital and a specialty pharmaceutical delivery company.
- Commercial operations began in 2025.
Key operating details
- Headquarters: Fishers, Indiana. The company leases approximately 30,000 square feet of office/industrial space from a related party under a lease through 2030.
- Employees: 41 full-time employees as of December 31, 2025, and about 10 part-time contract employees.
- Commercial activity: began in 2025; reported revenue of $113,250 for the 12 months ended December 31, 2025.
Financial position and liquidity
- Cash on hand: approximately $2.104 million as of December 31, 2025.
- Operating cash flow: $(8,253,348) for the twelve months ended December 31, 2025; $(2,289,273) for the twelve months ended December 31, 2024.
- Management has expressed substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern due to ongoing losses and cash burn. Planned sources of liquidity include existing cash, proceeds from a 2026 Streeterville financing, and potential additional drawdowns subject to conditions.
Intellectual property
- Exclusive Patent License Agreement with CEO Daniel S. O’Toole, amended in December 2024 and March 2025, granting rights to use, sell, manufacture, and commercialize certain ALM mailbox technologies.
- The business relies heavily on the licensed technology from the CEO.
- Patent portfolio: nine U.S. patents issued as of December 31, 2025; three additional U.S. patent applications pending examination; 77 non-U.S. patent applications in process, with several international patents and pending national phases.
Trademarks and software
- Trademark activity includes DRONEDEK and ARRIVE-related marks, with several marks registered or allowed and ongoing filings for the ARRIVE family and related terms.
- The company uses third-party and open-source software components and acknowledges associated compliance obligations and risks.
Customers and traction
- Pilot programs with at least two customers: a regional hospital and a specialty pharmaceutical delivery company.
- Early commercial activity and pilot deployments serve as initial validation for the platform.
Regulatory, safety, and compliance considerations
- Data privacy and protection requirements are a focus (e.g., CCPA/CPRA, Virginia DP Act) and HIPAA applies when handling protected health information in early operations.
- Evolving AI-related regulation may affect product development and deployment.
- Drone and robotic delivery face regulatory requirements for airspace access, safety, and privacy.
- Environmental, health, and safety considerations apply to hardware development and testing, including hazardous materials handling in R&D and manufacturing.
Notable risks and governance
- Early-stage, loss-making profile with ongoing capital needs.
- Dependence on management, particularly the CEO, for intellectual property and capital-raising.
- Financing arrangements with Streeterville Capital include provisions that could trigger substantial monthly cash repayments under certain conditions; outcomes are linked to stock price and market conditions.
- As of March 31, 2026, the company was not in compliance with certain Nasdaq continued listing standards, creating potential delisting risk and related implications for liquidity and funding.
- Material weaknesses in internal controls have been identified and remediation efforts are underway.
- Ongoing litigation includes an employment action and contract/loan-related matters.
Public-company status
Arrive AI operates as an emerging growth company and a smaller reporting company, and has used related exemptions for certain internal control attestation and disclosure requirements.
Summary
Arrive AI is developing a universal ALM infrastructure and platform centered on Arrive Points, with revenue channels from network subscriptions, AI/analytics services, and marketplace transactions. The company began commercial operations in 2025, reported modest revenue in that year, is in an early-stage loss-making phase, and intends to scale its network to 100,000 Arrive Points over five years while managing IP, funding, regulatory, and governance risks.
