Apple Holds Talks with Intel, Samsung for Chipmaking in Domestic Fabs
By Reuters | 05 May, 2026
Apple is considering using Intel and Samsung Electronics to produce the main processors for its devices in fabs being developed in Texas to reduce its total reliance on TSMC.
Apple has held exploratory discussions about using Intel and Samsung Electronics to produce the main processors for its devices, Bloomberg News reported on Monday, citing people familiar with the deliberations.
Apple executives have made visits to a Samsung plant under development in Texas and, separately, also held preliminary talks with Intel about enlisting the company's chipmaking services, Bloomberg reported.
While the move would offer Apple a secondary option beyond its longtime partner Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, the iPhone-maker is also concerned about using non-TSMC technology, the report said, citing worries about reliability and scale.
Reuters could not immediately verify the report. Apple and Samsung did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment. Intel declined to comment.
Discussions with Samsung and Intel remain at early stages as neither effort has resulted in any orders so far, the report said.
Apple warned of continuing chip supply constraints when it reported results last month. iPhone sales were held back in the quarter by supply constraints for the advanced processor chips that form the brains of the device, then-CEO Tim Cook had said.
The iPhone 17-family's chips are made on a variant of the same TSMC chip manufacturing technology as many leading AI chips.
(Reporting by Rhea Rose Abraham in Bengaluru; Editing by Janane Venkatraman)
Recent Articles
- Musk's Starbase Shakes Up Life on its Periphery
- Vox Momenti: Mars Man Rap
- GoldSea Votes: An Asian Governor in Maine...and Oklahoma?
- 'I Love the Inflation,' Trump Says of Prices Rising Amid Iran War
- China's JUNO Neutrino Detector Advances Precision in Mass-Ordering Quest
- Only 11% of Europeans View US as Ally, Survey Shows
- BYD Will Be World's Biggest Automaker in 5 Years Says Its Chairman
- US Consumer Prices Increase at Fastest Pace in 3 Years
- Traders Keep Bets on Fed Rate Hike by October
- Drone Risks Keep World Cup Security Planners Frantic
