Intel launches production of advanced 18A-P chip node, moves closer to potential Apple foundry deal

Apple inks 'preliminary chip-making agreement' with Intel: A major step in American Semiconductor Revival

Intel has officially begun production of its most advanced chip process technology yet — the 18A-P node — marking a significant milestone in the company’s efforts to revitalize its foundry business and compete with industry leader TSMC.

Announced at the VLSI Symposium in Honolulu, Hawaii, the move brings Intel one step closer to securing high-profile external customers, including a potential deal to manufacture chips for Apple devices.

Key Highlights from Intel’s Announcement

  • Intel has entered “risk production” for 18A-P, an early manufacturing stage that validates the technology will meet customer requirements upon final qualification.
  • The new node delivers 9% higher performance or 18% lower power consumption compared to the standard 18A process.
  • 18A-P offers at least 20% better heat resistance and full compatibility with existing 18A infrastructure.
  • Volume production of the base 18A node is already underway at Intel’s Arizona fab.

Why This Matters for Intel’s Foundry Ambitions

After years of manufacturing challenges and delayed process nodes, Intel is positioning 18A-P as a key proving ground for external customers. While the company has begun shipping PC chips built on 18A, analysts believe the enhanced 18A-P version could be more attractive to major clients like Apple.

Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan has expressed optimism about securing multiple foundry commitments in the second half of 2026. Shares of Intel have already surged more than 200% year-to-date amid hopes of a business turnaround, boosted by U.S. government investment and a major stake from Nvidia.

Challenges and Opportunities Ahead

  • Yield rates remain critical — analysts emphasize that consistent high yields (above 90%) will be necessary to win major contracts.
  • A significant hurdle is Intel’s limited experience with Arm-based architectures, which dominate custom chips from Apple, Google, and Amazon. TSMC currently leads in this area.
  • Advanced packaging could provide a faster path to revenue, with Intel’s EMIB technology positioned as a strong alternative to TSMC’s CoWoS amid ongoing capacity bottlenecks.

Chip analyst Ben Bajarin noted that Apple is likely waiting for the 18A-P process before moving forward with any manufacturing partnership.

MacDailyNews Take: Intel 18A is a strong technical contender — often rated higher on performance/efficiency thanks to aggressive innovations like PowerVia — and gives Intel a credible shot at foundry resurgence. However, TSMC N2 leads on density and manufacturing scale, maintaining its dominance for most high-volume customers.

The real winner, as always, will depend on yields, cost, and specific design needs. For Apple-style mobile/custom silicon, TSMC’s density edge is powerful. For certain HPC/AI chips where efficiency and power delivery matter most, Intel 18A (especially -P) could be of value.



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