Samsung Accelerates Texas Chip Complex with 1,000 Staff Moves
Samsung Electronics has begun relocating approximately 1,000 employees to its new semiconductor fabrication complex in Taylor, Texas, marking a significant acceleration of the $17 billion project. The company is moving staff to a newly completed six-story office hub at the center of the massive campus.
Key Project Details
- Timeline: Production expected to begin by late 2026
- Focus: Manufacturing smallest, most advanced AI chips
- Scale: 4.85 million square meter site with 370,000 square meters of building space
- Future Potential: Blueprint allows for up to 10 fabrication plants
Michele Glaze, senior director of communications at Samsung Austin Semiconductor, confirmed employee transfers will begin early next year, with additional security, hospitality and landscaping staff to follow as operations scale up.
Strategic Importance
The Taylor facility represents a core pillar of Samsung’s global production network. The company told investors it will maintain “flexible” foundry investments, pacing spending with customer demand while completing construction and equipment installation.
Samsung’s foundry division has secured major contracts this year, including deals with Tesla and Apple. The company aims to achieve profitability by 2027 after significantly narrowing operating losses in recent quarters.
“We achieved a record level of orders led by advanced nodes, including securing a major 2-nanometer customer. Operating losses narrowed significantly,” the company stated during its July-September earnings call.
Industry sources estimate third-quarter foundry losses have fallen below 1 trillion won ($700 million). Among the biggest wins is a $16.5 billion AI chip supply contract with Tesla, announced in July.
Major Client Confirmation
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has confirmed that the company’s latest AI silicon will be produced at Samsung’s Taylor facility once operational.
Samsung unveiled the investment plan in November 2021 and began construction in early 2022. With employee relocation now underway, the project enters a critical phase ahead of its planned 2026 launch for advanced-chip production.



