TLDRs;
- Samsung will relocate 1,000 employees to its Taylor, Texas semiconductor site ahead of its advanced AI chip fab launch.
- The new facility, backed by $17 billion, targets 2-nanometer chip production by late 2026 or early 2027.
- Monthly wafer output is expected to reach 16,000–17,000 units once the fab stabilizes and enters full production.
- Local energy and infrastructure upgrades are likely as the tech corridor attracts data centers and power-intensive industries.
Samsung Electronics is accelerating development of its multibillion-dollar semiconductor hub in Taylor, Texas, with plans to move roughly 1,000 employees to a newly completed office building at the expansive site.
According to local officials and company representatives, the relocation will begin early next year, marking one of the first large-scale workforce shifts tied to the company’s emerging U.S. manufacturing footprint.
The Taylor comple, spanning nearly 5 million square meters, will serve as the cornerstone of Samsung’s next-generation fabrication strategy. Once complete, the site will include an advanced chip plant, utility systems, and several support facilities designed to operate as a fully integrated production ecosystem.
With a total planned investment of $17 billion, the project ranks among the largest semiconductor commitments in the United States in recent years.
Fab Targets Late 2026 for AI Chip Output
Samsung expects the Taylor fabrication plant to begin operating by late 2026. The facility is being built to manufacture cutting-edge chips suitable for AI workloads, a segment where demand has surged as cloud providers and device makers race to secure leading-edge silicon.
Production targets provided by industry sources suggest the factory is aiming for a monthly output of 16,000 to 17,000 wafers once fully ramped. Because Samsung shifted its original plan from a 4-nanometer process to an advanced 2-nanometer node to stay competitive with TSMC, the company faces a roughly 10–11 month stabilization period before high-volume manufacturing can begin. That timeline places mass production somewhere between late 2026 and early 2027.
The adjustment to a more advanced process node came with challenges. Reports from 2024 indicated that Samsung’s yields on its next-gen Gate-All-Around (GAA) technologies, namely the SF3 and SF2, remained below 50%.
Those hurdles contributed to temporary slowdowns in construction and equipment installation throughout 2025 as Samsung recalibrated customer commitments and internal targets.
Texas Tech Corridor Braces for Surging Power Needs
The Taylor facility is emerging in a rapidly evolving energy landscape. The area sits within Oncor Electric’s service region, which already hosts massive industrial loads, including two major Bitcoin mining operations in nearby Rockdale. One of these mining sites is projected to consume as much power as two large U.S. cities.
Energy analysts say the arrival of Samsung’s fab will further accelerate grid upgrades. Oncor is expected to invest heavily in reinforced transmission lines, substation expansions, and new towers to support the region’s compounded demand. These improvements could unlock a wave of contracting opportunities for transmission and power-infrastructure specialists.
Adding to the load is Project Comal, a proposed 220-acre data center campus northeast of Samsung’s site. If approved, the development would amplify demand for power, cooling infrastructure, and high-capacity fiber networks. The interconnected growth highlights how Taylor is rapidly transforming into a high-density technology corridor.
Lessons From Past Outages Shape Resilience Planning
Samsung’s Texas ambitions are also influenced by past disruptions. During Winter Storm Uri in 2021, the company’s Austin plant was forced offline for nearly a month, causing significant production delays and supply chain ripple effects.
That experience reinforced the need for local generation, battery storage, and smart demand-response strategies at future facilities.
As the new Taylor fab advances, energy experts believe Samsung may adopt more robust on-site backup systems to avoid repeating the vulnerabilities exposed during the 2021 freeze.


