The semiconductor world is currently caught in a game of "foundry musical chairs," and for the upcoming
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6, the music has reportedly stopped at
TSMC. Despite recent rumors that
Qualcomm might return to Samsung Foundry for its next flagship, a new report from
Smart Chip Insider suggests that the tech giant is sticking exclusively with
TSMC’s
2nm N2P process.
Key Points
- TSMC Exclusive: The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 and Gen 6 Pro will likely be manufactured solely by TSMC using the 2nm N2P node.
- Design Lock-In: The two-year development cycle makes it impossible for Qualcomm to switch to Samsung for a 2026 release.
- Frequency Milestone: The "Pro" model is tipped to be the first mobile chip to hit a stable 5GHz+ clock speed.
- Dual-Sourcing Strategy: Qualcomm is still talking to Samsung Foundry for future chips (likely the Gen 7) to lower manufacturing costs.
- Next-Gen Tech: Expect support for LPDDR6 RAM and UFS 5.0 storage, which will be essential for the next wave of on-device AI.
The TSMC Monopoly (For Now)
Designing a top-tier chip is a marathon, not a sprint. The report highlights a cold reality of the industry: you can’t just swap manufacturers at the eleventh hour. The development cycle for an advanced System-on-Chip (SoC) usually spans
two years. With the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 expected to launch in the third quarter of 2026, it is technically too late for Qualcomm to pivot its design from
TSMC’s architecture to Samsung’s.
What we know about the Gen 6 lineup:
- Two Variants: Rumors point to a standard Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 and a high-performance "Pro" model.
- The 2nm Jump: Both are expected to utilize TSMC’s N2P node, skipping the standard N2 process to squeeze out a 5% performance boost and better power efficiency.
- Extreme Speeds: Early whispers suggest the Pro variant could cross the 5GHz threshold, potentially reaching up to 5.5GHz thanks to new thermal solutions like Heat Pass Block (HPB) technology.
The Samsung Connection
So, where did the Samsung rumors come from? They aren't entirely baseless. At CES 2026, Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon confirmed that the company is in active discussions with Samsung.
While the Gen 6 seems locked into
TSMC, the "Special Relationship" between Samsung and Qualcomm is heating up for
2027 and beyond. Samsung’s
2nm GAA (Gate-All-Around) yields are reportedly stabilizing, and Qualcomm is eager to dual-source its chips to reduce costs and avoid being at the mercy of TSMC’s high prices.