Key Points
- Tata’s ₹91,000 crore chip plant in Gujarat is India’s first semiconductor fabrication facility
- The Dholera SEZ will directly employ 21,000 people across 66 hectares
- Five semiconductor SEZs approved since June 2025 with combined investment exceeding ₹1 lakh crore
India will have its first semiconductor fabrication plant after the Centre notified a special economic zone for Tata Semiconductor Manufacturing Private Limited in Dholera, Gujarat, on 9 April 2026. The facility, spread across 66 hectares, will employ 21,000 people and produce chips domestically for the first time in the country’s history.
The notification marks a turning point for India’s semiconductor ambitions. Currently, India imports nearly all the chips used in its phones, computers, cars and defence equipment. A fabrication plant, commonly called a fab, manufactures the actual silicon chips that power electronic devices, as opposed to assembly units that only package imported chips.
Tata’s investment of ₹91,000 crore makes this the largest single commitment in India’s semiconductor sector. The plant will be an AI-enabled fabrication facility, according to the notification issued by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
What is a semiconductor SEZ
A special economic zone, or SEZ, is a designated area where businesses receive tax benefits and simplified regulations to encourage exports and large investments. The Dholera SEZ has been approved exclusively for electronic hardware, software and IT-enabled services.
The Centre amended SEZ rules in June 2025 specifically to attract semiconductor manufacturers. Key changes included reducing the minimum land requirement from 50 hectares to 10 hectares, allowing flexibility in land ownership norms and permitting domestic sales on payment of applicable duties. These changes addressed longstanding industry concerns that previous rules were too rigid for capital-intensive chip manufacturing.
Since the regulatory easing, the Board of Approval for SEZs has cleared five major semiconductor projects. Micron Semiconductor Technology India received notification on 23 June 2025 for an assembly and testing plant in Sanand, Gujarat, with an investment of ₹13,000 crore and projected employment of 20,786 people.
Assembly, testing, marking and packaging units, known as ATMP facilities, do not manufacture chips but receive ready silicon wafers and package them into finished products. India already has such facilities; the Tata fab represents a move up the value chain to actual chip manufacturing.
Other approved projects include Hubballi Durable Goods Cluster in Karnataka for electronics components manufacturing with ₹100 crore investment, CG Semi with ₹2,150 crore for outsourced semiconductor assembly and testing, and Kaynes Semicon with ₹681 crore for similar operations.
Advertisement
The five approved SEZs together represent investments exceeding ₹1 lakh crore and will create employment for approximately 50,000 people directly. The Tata facility alone accounts for more than 85 per cent of this investment.
For context, ₹91,000 crore is approximately $10.8 billion at current exchange rates. Global semiconductor fabs typically cost between $10 billion and $20 billion, placing Tata’s project within the range of facilities operated by leading manufacturers such as TSMC in Taiwan and Samsung in South Korea.
The Dholera facility will focus on AI-enabled chips, reflecting growing global demand for processors used in artificial intelligence applications. Such chips are used in data centres, autonomous vehicles and consumer devices with AI features.
Reducing import dependence
India currently imports semiconductors worth approximately $30 billion annually, according to industry estimates. The government’s semiconductor mission, launched in 2021, aims to make India a significant player in chip manufacturing by 2030.
The approved SEZs are intended to build domestic value chains gradually. While assembly and testing plants offer immediate employment and export revenue, fabrication facilities provide greater strategic value by reducing dependence on imports during supply chain disruptions.
The global chip shortage during 2020–2022, which disrupted automobile and electronics production worldwide, highlighted the risks of concentrated manufacturing in a few countries. India, along with the United States, European Union and Japan, has since announced incentives to build domestic chip-making capacity.
Your Questions, Answered
What is India’s first chip fabrication plant?
Tata Semiconductor Manufacturing is building India’s first chip fabrication facility in Dholera, Gujarat. The ₹91,000 crore plant will manufacture semiconductors domestically, unlike existing assembly units that only package imported chips.
How many jobs will the Tata semiconductor plant create?
The Dholera facility will directly employ 21,000 people. Combined with four other approved semiconductor SEZs, the total direct employment from these projects will reach approximately 50,000.
When will the Dholera chip plant start production?
The SEZ was notified on 9 April 2026. Semiconductor fabrication plants typically take three to five years to become operational after construction begins. Tata has not announced a specific production start date.
Why is domestic chip manufacturing important for India?
India imports semiconductors worth approximately $30 billion annually. Domestic fabrication reduces dependence on foreign suppliers and protects against supply chain disruptions like the global chip shortage of 2020–2022.
