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TSMC Arizona Spearheads American Semiconductor Renaissance with Third Manufacturing Complex

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company’s groundbreaking ceremony for its third fabrication facility in Arizona marks yet another significant milestone in the company’s investment of approximately $165 billion in semiconductor manufacturing in the United States. The TSMC Arizona initiative officially commenced construction in late April 2025, solidifying its status as the most significant foreign direct investment in American history.

Accelerated Project Implementation

In a notable development, the company has accelerated its construction timeline for the third fab. Initially planned for construction in 2026, TSMC Arizona moved the groundbreaking forward to 2025, reflecting its commitment to expanding U.S. production capacity amid potentially growing demand for advanced semiconductors. This expedited schedule follows TSMC’s board meeting, held on U.S. soil for the first time in the company’s 37-year history, in February 2025. This also signals the potentially increasing strategic importance of its American operations.

Revolutionary Manufacturing Technology

The third Arizona facility will manufacture chips using 2-nanometer or more advanced process technology, with production potentially scheduled to begin by the end of this decade. This facility joins TSMC’s first Arizona fab, which started volume production of 4-nanometer chips in late 2024, and a second fab currently under construction that will focus on advanced 2-nanometer technology with next-generation nanosheet transistors, targeted for production in 2028.

What distinguishes these facilities is their exceptional scale — each will feature cleanroom areas approximately double the size of a typical logic fab, according to TSMC’s press release. This expanded capacity is designed to accommodate the extensive equipment required for leading-edge production, potentially positioning TSMC Arizona at the forefront of semiconductor manufacturing technology in the United States.

Comprehensive Packaging Strategy

Beyond chip fabrication, TSMC is enhancing its U.S. presence through advanced packaging capabilities. In October 2024, the company signed an agreement with Amkor Technology to collaborate on advanced packaging at Amkor’s planned $2 billion facility in Peoria, Arizona. The partnership focuses on TSMC’s Integrated Fan-Out (InFO) and Chip on Wafer on Substrate (CoWoS) packaging technologies, which are critical for smartphone applications and artificial intelligence GPUs, respectively.

The proximity of front-end fabs and Amkor’s back-end facility is designed to accelerate overall product cycle times, potentially creating a more integrated and efficient semiconductor manufacturing ecosystem in Arizona. This collaboration addresses a crucial aspect of the semiconductor supply chain, which has been previously concentrated in Asia, allowing TSMC Arizona customers to have their chips both fabricated and packaged domestically.

TSMC will reportedly establish its own CoWoS advanced packaging plant in the U.S., part of its expanded Arizona campus. This should complement the company’s significant expansion of packaging capacity in Taiwan, where CoWoS capacity is projected to nearly triple to 90,000 wafers per month by the end of 2026.

Economic Impact and Employment Generation

The expanded operation represents a potentially transformative investment for the region’s economy. When fully operational, the three fabs are expected to create approximately 6,000 direct high-tech jobs. The construction phase alone may generate many direct construction jobs, with many additional indirect supplier and consumer jobs anticipated throughout this decade.

The company currently employs over 3,000 people at its Arizona campus, which spans approximately 1,100 acres. Beyond direct employment, TSMC’s presence has catalyzed a broader semiconductor ecosystem in Arizona. According to the Greater Phoenix Economic Council, the region has attracted 39 semiconductor-related companies, resulting in the creation of more than 7,700 jobs and over $37 billion in capital investment. This clustering effect is transforming Phoenix into what some industry observers have dubbed the “Silicon Desert.”

Financial Commitment and Federal Support

The TSMC Arizona investment has undergone significant evolution since its initial announcement. What began as a $12 billion commitment in 2020 expanded to $40 billion in 2022, then to $65 billion in 2024 with the addition of the third fab. In March 2025, TSMC announced an additional $100 billion investment, bringing the total to $165 billion — reportedly the most significant foreign direct investment in U.S. history.

Significant federal incentives under the CHIPS and Science Act have supported this expansion. In November 2024, the U.S. Department of Commerce finalized an award of up to $6.6 billion in direct funding for the project, along with up to $5 billion in loans. The company is also eligible for Investment Tax Credits of up to 25% on qualified capital expenditures.

Industry Partnerships and Environmental Leadership

During the groundbreaking ceremony, industry leaders expressed support for the project and its importance to their operations. Jensen Huang of NVIDIA emphasized the importance of manufacturing AI infrastructure in America. Lisa Su of AMD highlighted their role as one of the first and largest high-performance computing customers, stating they’re proud to begin production of their leadership 5th Gen AMD EPYC server processors later this year. Apple has positioned itself as the largest customer at the TSMC Arizona facility, committing to sourcing chips as part of its broader $500 billion U.S. investment plan.

Despite the massive scale of its operations, TSMC has implemented significant sustainability measures at its Arizona campus. The company has designed its facilities with a target of 90% water recycling through an advanced Industrial Water Reclamation Plant designed to achieve “Near Zero Liquid Discharge.” By the end of this decade, when all three Arizona fabs are operational, TSMC will potentially establish a comprehensive semiconductor manufacturing ecosystem in the United States, thereby strengthening supply resilience and reducing dependency on offshore production.

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