Europe’s Semiconductor Future Gains Momentum with TSMC’s Strategic Expansion in Germany. In a major step toward deepening its presence in Europe, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) has officially announced the opening of a new European Chip Design Centre in Munich, scheduled to be operational by Q3 2025. This move reinforces TSMC’s commitment to support the automotive, AI, industrial, and IoT sectors across the European continent with next-generation chip design capabilities.

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A Strategic Hub in Munich: Fueling Europe’s Tech Ecosystem
The new TSMC European Design Centre, located in Munich’s growing semiconductor corridor, will serve as a core innovation hub focused on high-density, energy-efficient, and high-performance chip designs tailored to the European market.
TSMC executives revealed that this centre will work in close coordination with regional partners and customers to develop chips for autonomous vehicles, AI accelerators, edge computing, and smart factories.
“With our design centre in Munich, we’re investing not only in infrastructure but also in the collaborative innovation ecosystem that Europe’s next-generation industries require,” said Paul de Bot, President of TSMC Europe. “Germany is at the heart of automotive and industrial engineering, making it the perfect location to partner more closely with our European customers.”
Support from the European Union and Local Industry Leaders
The expansion aligns with the European Union’s €43 billion Chips Act, which aims to double Europe’s semiconductor market share to 20% by 2030.
The new Munich facility adds to TSMC’s €10 billion investment in the European Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (ESMC) joint venture fab in Dresden, which is currently under construction in partnership with Infineon Technologies, NXP Semiconductors, and Bosch.
“This move is a game-changer for Europe’s chip ecosystem,” said Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission. “TSMC’s commitment highlights Europe’s role as a growing powerhouse in global semiconductor innovation.”
The Dresden fab is expected to start production in 2027, using TSMC’s 28/22nm planar CMOS and 16/12nm FinFET process technologies for automotive-grade semiconductors.
Driving Growth in Automotive and AI Semiconductors
With Europe emerging as a hub for autonomous driving technologies, AI-based manufacturing, and smart energy systems, the Munich centre will accelerate custom chip development and reduce design-to-silicon turnaround for European customers.
TSMC’s advanced EDA tools, IP libraries, and design support teams will be localized to meet regional compliance and innovation demands.
According to internal sources, the facility will initially host a team of over 300 semiconductor engineers, with plans to expand to over 600 in the coming years.
“We’re bringing advanced chip design closer to where our customers innovate,” added Wei C.C., CEO of TSMC. “This helps reduce time to market while boosting Europe’s capability to develop proprietary semiconductors.”
Strategic Benefits for Europe’s Technology Independence
TSMC’s dual footprint in design (Munich) and manufacturing (Dresden) represents a unique end-to-end capability for Europe, enabling faster R&D iterations, robust supply chains, and reduced dependency on Asian chip supply routes.
Key highlights of this expansion include:
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Enhanced design ecosystem for European startups and OEMs
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Closer alignment with EU sustainability goals via energy-efficient chip design
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Boost to regional employment and local semiconductor engineering education
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Faster prototyping and validation for automotive-grade semiconductors
Industry analysts believe this move will catalyze growth for European chip startups, Tier 1 automotive suppliers, and industrial automation firms.
Why TSMC Chose Munich: The Silicon Valley of Europe
Munich, home to leading automotive and electronics companies like BMW, Audi, Siemens, and Infineon, is emerging as the Silicon Valley of Europe. With top-tier universities such as the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and a thriving R&D landscape, the city offers a perfect synergy of talent, infrastructure, and industry.
“We expect Munich to be a magnet for chip design talent,” said Markus Duesmann, CTO at Audi AG. “The presence of TSMC will spark new collaborations and open doors for innovation in electrification and autonomy.”
Looking Ahead: What This Means for the Semiconductor Landscape
As global chip demand continues to rise, Europe’s ambition to become self-sufficient is being accelerated by strategic foreign investments like TSMC’s. The Munich chip design centre adds critical capability in pre-silicon innovation, empowering local firms to compete globally in a world increasingly driven by silicon.

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With the Dresden fab supplying wafers and the Munich centre designing the chips, the company will offer an integrated design-to-supply pipeline in Europe for the first time in its history.





