NVIDIA to Build AI Supercomputers Entirely in the U.S.

NVIDIA has announced a landmark initiative to manufacture its next-generation AI supercomputers entirely in the United States, partnering with leading tech manufacturers to expand its domestic footprint and boost supply chain resilience.
The company is working with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), Foxconn, Wistron, Amkor, and SPIL to build and test NVIDIA Blackwell chips and AI supercomputers in Arizona and Texas. This marks the first time the full AI supercomputing stack — from chip fabrication to assembly and testing — will be produced on American soil.
AI Infrastructure at Scale
Blackwell chips have already entered production at TSMC’s fab facilities in Phoenix, Arizona, while supercomputer assembly plants are being established in Houston (with Foxconn) and Dallas (with Wistron). Mass production is expected to ramp up over the next 12 to 15 months.
As part of the effort, NVIDIA and its partners have commissioned over one million square feet of manufacturing space for the initiative. The company projects that within the next four years, it will produce up to $500 billion worth of AI infrastructure in the U.S. — a massive step toward building “AI factories” to support the next wave of global artificial intelligence adoption.
Factory of the Future
Packaging and testing operations will be handled by Amkor and SPIL, both operating out of Arizona, ensuring the end-to-end supply chain remains localized and secure.
NVIDIA says these new “AI factories” — data centers purpose-built for artificial intelligence workloads — will serve as the foundation of the digital economy. Tens of gigawatt-scale facilities are expected to be deployed in the coming years, creating hundreds of thousands of jobs and helping the U.S. secure its position in the global AI race.
CEO Jensen Huang: “A Historic Shift”
“The engines of the world’s AI infrastructure are being built in the United States for the first time,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Adding American manufacturing helps us better meet the incredible and growing demand for AI chips and supercomputers, strengthens our supply chain and boosts our resiliency.”
NVIDIA will also leverage its own advanced AI tools and platforms — including NVIDIA Omniverse for digital twin simulations and NVIDIA Isaac GR00T robotics for automated manufacturing — to operate the new production lines more efficiently.
The announcement comes as global demand for AI hardware soars, driven by the rapid deployment of generative AI, autonomous robotics, and cloud-based intelligence platforms. With this U.S.-based initiative, NVIDIA is aiming to future-proof both its supply chain and national technological competitiveness.