Elon Musk Bets Big on Samsung to Build Tesla’s AI6 Superchip

After years in TSMC’s shadow, Samsung has finally landed the kind of deal that makes the industry stop and look, a $16.5 billion contract to produce Tesla’s most advanced chip to date. It’s not just a win, it’s a turning point. The long-term agreement, announced by Samsung this week, is set to run through 2033, placing the South Korean tech giant back in the spotlight as a key foundry player in the race to build powerful AI silicon.

A Chip Built for Tesla’s AI-First Future

At the heart of the deal is Tesla’s AI6 chip, an all-in-one semiconductor that will serve as the brains behind the company’s most ambitious technologies: the Full Self-Driving (Supervised) driver assistance platform, Optimus humanoid robots, and data center-grade AI training workloads. It’s a major leap forward in Tesla’s vertical integration strategy, one that ditches reliance on Nvidia and affirms its status as both an automaker and a full-fledged AI company.

Samsung’s new semiconductor facility in Taylor, Texas, will be ground zero for the AI6’s production. Though the plant’s completion has been delayed until 2026, it sits strategically close to Elon Musk’s residence, signaling his hands-on involvement. Musk even confirmed on X that he plans to personally walk the production line and help optimize operations.

“Tesla’s actual output may be several times higher than $16.5B,” Musk hinted in his post, underscoring just how expansive this partnership might become.

Samsung’s Foundry Gets Its Breakthrough

This deal couldn’t have come at a better time for Samsung’s struggling foundry division. Despite being the world’s largest memory chipmaker, Samsung’s contract chip manufacturing arm has been battling under-utilization and fierce competition from Taiwan’s TSMC, which dominates the global foundry market with a 67.6% share as of Q1 2025. In contrast, Samsung’s share slid to 7.7%, down from 8.1% the quarter before.

Now, with Tesla on board as a flagship customer, Samsung has not only secured a massive revenue stream but also regained credibility in the fiercely competitive AI chip space. Analysts expect the ripple effects to be far-reaching, boosting Samsung’s ability to attract additional clients, particularly those in the AI and automotive sectors.

The Rise of the Custom AI Chip

This isn’t Tesla’s first chip rodeo. The company moved away from Nvidia’s Drive platform in 2019, debuting its own FSD Computer (Hardware 3), also manufactured by Samsung. With Hardware 6, Tesla is going a step further by building highly specialized AI hardware to match its AI-first ambitions.

Interestingly, Tesla is hedging its bets across multiple foundries. While Samsung will handle the AI6, rival TSMC is tasked with producing the AI5 chip, which was recently finalized and will be built in both Taiwan and TSMC’s new Arizona fab. Tesla’s current AI4 chip is also made by Samsung, showcasing how the automaker is splitting chip production across partners to scale rapidly and reduce risk.

A Signal of the Next Semiconductor Leap

What makes the AI6 particularly important is not just its application, but its timing. The chip will be manufactured using next-gen processes, as both Samsung and TSMC aim to achieve 2-nanometer fabrication nodes over the coming years. This will push the boundaries of energy efficiency and performance, a must for both autonomous systems and power-hungry AI models.

With AI workloads exploding in demand from self-driving cars to humanoid robotics to real-time inference, this deal positions Tesla and Samsung as co-pilots in the AI silicon arms race.

Chips, Bots, and the Road Ahead

Elon Musk’s bet on Samsung marks more than just a manufacturing contract; it signals the next era of Tesla’s evolution. No longer just a car company, Tesla is rapidly becoming an AI and robotics firm with custom silicon at its core.

For Samsung, this is an opportunity to prove it can compete head-to-head with TSMC and carve out a meaningful stake in the future of advanced chip fabrication.

As the battle for AI dominance intensifies, all eyes are now on Texas, where one of the most important chips of the next decade is about to be born.

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