Apple is losing its long-standing key role in the global chip industry. After more than a decade as TSMC's most important customer, Apple is being overtaken by Nvidia. This is triggered by the massive increase in demand for chips for artificial intelligence. This development not only changes TSMC's revenue distribution but also the balance of power between Apple, Nvidia, and the entire semiconductor industry.
For years, Apple was synonymous with stability and planning security in the world's most advanced chip manufacturing. The close collaboration with TSMC was considered a strategic advantage, securing Apple early access to new manufacturing technologies. But the market is shifting. AI applications are driving investments into entirely new dimensions, bringing different requirements into focus than traditional consumer hardware. This is precisely where the current transformation begins.
Nvidia becomes TSMC's largest customer
According to a CNBC report, Apple will have lost its position as TSMC's largest customer by 2026. Instead, Nvidia will become the foundry's single most important source of revenue.
Analysts predict that Nvidia will generate approximately $33 billion in revenue for TSMC in 2026. This represents about 22 percent of the foundry's total revenue. Apple is expected to generate approximately $27 billion, or about 18 percent, during the same period.
According to Nvidia, the switch is already a reality. Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, confirmed in a podcast that Nvidia has overtaken Apple as TSMC's largest customer.
Apple's historical role at TSMC
For over ten years, Apple was considered TSMC's most important customer. The company had its specially designed A-series processors for iPhone and iPad, as well as the M-series chips for Mac and iPad, manufactured there.
This long-term partnership gave Apple early access to the most advanced manufacturing processes. At the same time, Apple's high and predictable production volumes allowed TSMC to justify the extremely high investments required for each new generation of semiconductor process nodes. For years, Apple was therefore a key factor in stabilizing the foundry's technological development.
AI demand is changing the revenue structure
Nvidia's growing importance is closely linked to the global expansion of AI infrastructure. Nvidia's graphics processors are widely used as accelerators in data centers, particularly by large cloud providers. This demand is growing significantly faster than the market for traditional end devices.
A key reason for Nvidia's increasing revenue share lies in the nature of its chips. AI accelerators are significantly larger, more complex, and more expensive to manufacture than Apple's A or M series. They require state-of-the-art processing nodes, advanced packaging technologies, and result in considerably higher wafer costs. For TSMC, this translates into higher revenue per chip produced.
Different chip strategies of Apple and Nvidia
Apple continues to ship significantly larger quantities of processors than Nvidia. However, the chips are smaller and, as system-on-a-chip designs, optimized for energy efficiency and consumer devices. This results in lower manufacturing costs per unit, which directly impacts TSMC's revenue per chip.
Nvidia, on the other hand, produces significantly lower volumes, but achieves a much higher revenue per wafer due to the size, complexity, and price of its AI accelerators. This difference explains why Nvidia, despite lower volumes, can become TSMC's highest-revenue customer.
Possible consequences for Apple and TSMC
The growing reliance on AI customers has a direct impact on TSMC's strategic direction. Apple remains one of its most important customers, but is no longer the primary driver for capacity expansion or investment decisions.
Analysts now see Nvidia in the role that Apple held for years: as a major customer that drives the development of new manufacturing technologies and economically justifies the enormous investments in each new state-of-the-art process node.
Apple remains important, but is losing its leading role
TSMC's loss of its leading position demonstrates the profound transformation of the semiconductor industry due to artificial intelligence. Apple remains a key player and one of the foundry's largest customers, but is no longer the focus of its investment strategy. Nvidia is profiting from the global AI boom, significantly shifting TSMC's economic priorities. For Apple, this development doesn't signify a loss of importance, but rather a changed role in a market increasingly dominated by AI infrastructure. (Image: Shutterstock / Vidpen)
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