TSMC is rapidly advancing its next-generation semiconductor manufacturing capabilities, with plans to bring four 2 nm fabrication plants online by 2026. The combined effort across these advanced facilities is expected to exceed a monthly capacity of 60,000 wafers. Part of this expansion is taking place in Kaohsiung´s Nanzi park, where installation of cutting-edge lithography equipment is underway in Fab 22´s new cleanroom. The current P1 line produces about 10,000 wafers monthly, while a concerted overnight effort has equipped the neighboring P2 hall, which aims to deliver trial wafers before the year´s end. Together, the P1 and P2 lines are slated to push Kaohsiung´s output beyond 30,000 wafers per month by December. Construction for P3 continues to support the A16 node, and preliminary work for P4 and P5 is in the permit phase.
Approximately 200 kilometers to the north, in Hsinchu´s Baoshan district, TSMC´s Fab 20 is also progressing swiftly. Its P1 section has completed risk-ramp testing and is transitioning to full-scale production. Simultaneously, P2 is fully equipped and awaiting qualification batches, positioning the site to contribute substantially to 2 nm chip supply. With P3 and P4 structures already being constructed to serve the incoming A14 generation, the aggregate capacity from Hsinchu and Kaohsiung is projected to grow by another 30,000 to 35,000 wafers this year alone, further strengthening TSMC’s dominance in leading-edge manufacturing.
All four fabs will leverage TSMC´s inaugural nanosheet architecture, which promises notable efficiency gains by reducing switching power by 25 percent and boosting transistor density by 15 percent compared to the company´s 3 nm processes. Despite the increased production costs—each 300 mm wafer carries about a 50 percent price premium over existing 3 nm wafers—TSMC has already secured a wave of design contracts from technology powerhouses such as Apple, Qualcomm, and MediaTek, outpacing the engagement seen for previous 3 nm and 5 nm nodes. Industry analysts forecast these plants could underpin as much as half a trillion US dollars in global electronics revenue over the next five years, highlighting the immense economic ripple effect. Construction activity remains relentless as TSMC pushes to meet its ambitious targets for both capacity and technological leadership in the semiconductor landscape.