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Home » Nvidia snaps up AI chip packaging capacity as TSMC expands in U.S.
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Nvidia snaps up AI chip packaging capacity as TSMC expands in U.S.

i2wtcBy i2wtcApril 8, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
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TSMC scrambles to bring advanced packaging to the U.S. as demand soars from the AI boom

An underappreciated step in the chipmaking process is poised to become the next bottleneck for artificial intelligence.

Every microchip used to power artificial intelligence must be put into hardware that can interact with the outside world. But right now, almost all of this chipmaking step, known as advanced packaging, happens in Asia, and capacity is in short supply.

It’s now taking center stage as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. prepares to break ground on two new plants in Arizona and Elon Musk taps Intel for his ambitious custom chip plans.

“It can emerge as a bottleneck very quickly if people are not making the CapEx investments proactively to account for the surge in fab output that’s going to be coming in the next couple of years,” said John VerWey of Georgetown University’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology.

In a rare interview, TSMC North America packaging solutions head Paul Rousseau told CNBC that the numbers “are growing very substantially.”

Its most advanced method currently in use is called Chip on Wafer on Substrate, or CoWoS, and Rousseau said it is increasing at a stunning 80% compound annual growth rate.

AI giant Nvidia has reserved a majority of the most advanced capacity available at TSMC, which is the volume leader in packaging.

But Intel is technologically on par with the Taiwanese giant.

The U.S. chipmaker has struggled to solidify a major external customer for its chip fabrication business, but its packaging customers include Amazon and Cisco.

On Tuesday, Musk also tapped Intel to package custom chips for SpaceX, xAI and Tesla at his ambitious Terafab plant planned for Texas.

Intel does the majority of its final packaging in Vietnam, Malaysia and China. Portions of Intel’s most advanced packaging happen at U.S. facilities in New Mexico, Oregon and at a site in Chandler, Arizona, where CNBC got a tour in November.

The process has come into the spotlight as AI pushes the density, performance and efficiency needs of chipmakers racing to make the best hardware for inference workloads. As transistor density approaches physical limits, new methods of packaging silicon can help.

“It’s really the natural extension of Moore’s Law into the third dimension,” Rousseau said.

For decades, individual chips, known as dies, were removed from a single wafer and packaged into a system that connects to devices like computers, robots, cars and mobile phones. More advanced packaging methods took off as chip complexity exploded in the last few years with the advent of AI.

Now, multiple dies such as logic chips and high-bandwidth memory are packaged together into one larger chip, like a graphics processing unit, or GPU. Advanced packaging is used to connect all those dies together and allow them to communicate with each other and the broader system.

“Up until about 5 or 6 years ago, nobody was doing this,” said chip analyst Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights & Strategy, adding that packing used to be “an afterthought” that companies would assign to junior engineers.

“Now, obviously, we know it’s as important as the die itself,” he said.

TSMC CoWoS chips: Sample microchips packaged using CoWoS at TSMC’s offices in San Jose, California, shown to CNBC on February 20, 2026.

CNBC

The bottleneck

Nvidia has reserved the majority of TSMC’s leading CoWoS technology, and capacity is so heavily booked that TSMC has reportedly outsourced some steps to third-party companies that specialize in simpler parts of the process, such as ASE and Amkor.

ASE, which is the world’s largest outsourced semiconductor assembly and test company, sees advanced packaging sales doubling in 2026. ASE is building a large new site in Taiwan, where subsidiary SPIL also held a grand opening for another new packaging site, attended by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, last year.

TSMC is also ramping up two new packaging facilities in Taiwan, in addition to building two packaging facilities in Arizona.

Right now, TSMC sends 100% of chips to Taiwan to be packaged, even those made at its advanced chip fabrication plant in Phoenix, Arizona. TSMC didn’t disclose a timeline for completion of the U.S. packaging sites.

“To have that capability right next to the fab in Arizona is going to make their customers very happy,” leading packaging researcher Jan Vardaman of TechSearch International told CNBC.

That’s because it will lower turnaround time by avoiding the need to ship it back and forth between Asia and the U.S., she added.

Intel already does some packaging near its new advanced 18A chip manufacturing plant in Arizona.

The U.S. chipmaker has yet to secure a major external customer for making chips at its 18A fab, but foundry services head Mark Gardner told CNBC that the company has had customers for packaging since 2022, including Amazon and Cisco.

Nvidia is also looking to package at Intel as part of its $5 billion investment in the chipmaker that came weeks after the U.S. government invested $8.9 billion in 2025.

“Chip companies want to show the U.S. administration that they will do business with Intel, and the lower risk path with Intel is to do packaging,” Moorhead said.

When asked if Intel could find a major chip manufacturing customer through the back door of advanced packaging, Gardner said there’s “an inroad to that” with some customers.

“There’s benefits of everything being in one place,” he said.

Musk could be an early adopter for both chipmaking and packaging at Intel.

An Intel LinkedIn post on Tuesday said the company’s “ability to design, fabricate, and package ultra-high-performance chips at scale” would help Musk’s Terafab reach ambitions of producing 1 terrawatt of annual compute to power AI.

Intel advanced packaging engineer Shripad Gokhale shows CNBC’s Katie Tarasov Xeon server chips inside Intel’s advanced packaging facility in Chandler, Arizona, on November 17, 2025.

CNBC

Evolving from 2D to 3D

Many chips, like central processing units, are made with 2D packaging. More complex chips like GPUs need something extra, which is the realm of TSMC’s CoWoS, a form of 2.5D packaging.

For these chips, an additional layer of high-density wiring called an interposer adds tighter interconnections so high-bandwidth memory can mount directly around the chip, effectively eliminating what’s often referred to as the memory wall.

“You just can’t get enough memory inside your compute chip to fully utilize it. So when we introduce CoWoS, we are able to bring the HBM memory right beside the compute in a very efficient way,” said TSMC’s Rousseau.

TSMC pioneered its 2.5D technique in 2012 and it has since gone through several iterations. TSMC said Nvidia’s Blackwell GPUs are the first product to be made with its latest generation, CoWoS-L.

It’s this latest capacity that has everyone worried because Nvidia has reportedly reserved the majority of it.

Intel’s leading packaging technology is called embedded multi-die interconnect bridge, or EMIB. It works similar to the process used by Taiwan Semi, but with silicon bridges in place of an interposer. 

By “embedding these really small pieces of silicon just where they’re needed,” Intel’s Gardner said, “there’s a cost advantage.”

All the players are also working on what comes next: 3D packaging.

Intel calls its method Foveros Direct, while TSMC’s is called System on Integrated Chips, or SoIC.

“Instead of having the chip side by side, now we put them one on top of the other,” explained Rousseau, adding they “can really behave as if they’re one chip and that provides a whole other level of performance gain.”

Rousseau said it’ll be a couple of years before we see TSMC packaging products with SoIC.

Meanwhile, memory companies like Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron have advanced packaging factories of their own, where they use 3D packaging to stack dies into high-bandwidth memory. 

As they hustle to get chips out the door, memory and logic chipmakers are also looking to replace bumps with copper pads in a new method called hybrid bonding, boosting the number of chips that can fit in a stack.

“Instead of a bump, we could do a pad-to-pad connection, which is almost no distance at all, and so that gives us better power performance,” explained Vardaman. “It also gives us better electrical performance since the shortest path is the best path.”

Watch: How advanced packaging is advancing AI chips in the third dimension

Choose CNBC as your preferred source on Google and never miss a moment from the most trusted name in business news.



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