Apple Expands U.S. Manufacturing Program With $400M Plan

Paul Jackson

March 26, 2026

Key Points

  • Apple (AAPL) plans to invest $400 million through 2030 to expand U.S.-based component production.
  • New program partners include BoschCirrus Logic (CRUS)TDK, and Qnity Electronics.
  • Work includes chips at a Washington state facility and process development with GlobalFoundries (GFS).

What Apple Announced

Apple (AAPL) is expanding its American Manufacturing Program by adding BoschCirrus Logic (CRUS)TDK, and Qnity Electronics. The company said it plans to invest $400 million through 2030 to expand U.S.-based production of key components used across Apple devices.

Apple framed the move as part of a broader push to strengthen domestic production capacity and support jobs in advanced electronics and semiconductors.

  • $400 million in planned investment through 2030
  • New partners: BoschCirrus Logic (CRUS)TDKQnity Electronics
  • Focus areas: sensorsintegrated circuits, and advanced materials

Why The Supply Chain Angle Matters

The announcement lands at a time when major companies are rethinking where critical components get made, with more emphasis on manufacturing closer to end markets and reducing exposure to geopolitical disruption. For Apple, which relies on a deep and global supplier network, shifting pieces of the component stack into the U.S. can change the risk profile of certain product lines over time.

Apple also positioned this expansion as a continuation of a previously announced $600 billion, four-year commitment to invest in U.S. manufacturing. This new $400 million plan is specifically tied to component production and manufacturing partnerships under the American Manufacturing Program.

  • Apple is building on a prior $600 billion, four-year U.S. manufacturing commitment
  • The new effort targets production capacity for components, not just assembly
  • Some components will be made in the U.S. for the first time

What Will Be Made In The U.S.

Apple said the new partnerships will focus on parts that sit closer to the “core” of hardware differentiation: sensors, chips tied to device features, and materials essential to semiconductor manufacturing.

One of the notable items is Apple’s plan to work with Bosch and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. to produce chips for sensing hardware at TSMC’s facility in Washington state. Apple also said Cirrus Logic will collaborate with GlobalFoundries (GFS) to develop semiconductor process technologies supporting features such as Face ID.

In parallel, Apple said TDK will begin making sensors in the United States for the first time, while Qnity Electronics will supply materials described as critical for semiconductor production and AI-related technologies.

  • Bosch and TSMC: sensing-hardware chips at a Washington facility
  • Cirrus Logic and GlobalFoundries: process technologies tied to features like Face ID
  • TDK: sensors manufactured in the U.S. for the first time
  • Qnity Electronics: materials for semiconductors and AI-related technologies

What Investors Will Watch Next

The key swing factors are execution details: how quickly these manufacturing lines ramp, which specific components transition to U.S. production, and whether yields and costs remain competitive. For U.S. investors, the most direct read-through may be on suppliers named in the plan and their ability to turn these collaborations into durable, high-volume programs.

WSA Take

Apple’s latest expansion is a targeted bet on U.S.-based production for components that influence device performance, reliability, and feature roadmaps. The involvement of TSMC in Washington and process work with GlobalFoundries (GFS) signals a focus on scalable semiconductor capability, not just symbolic localization. For Apple, the bigger story is resilience: building optionality into its supply chain for sensors, chips, and advanced materials. For partners like Cirrus Logic (CRUS), the market will watch whether these collaborations translate into longer visibility and deeper integration in future hardware cycles.

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WallStAccess is a financial media platform providing market commentary and analysis for informational and educational purposes only. This content does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Readers should conduct their own research or consult a licensed financial professional before making investment decisions.

Author

Paul Jackson

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