United Microelectronics (UMC) has declared an increase in its wafer foundry pricing, becoming another major foundry following top players like TSMC to join the wave of price hikes. Against a market backdrop where demand persistently outstrips supply, this round of semiconductor foundry price increases is spreading throughout the entire industry chain.
According to a letter UMC sent to its customers, the company will formally implement the adjusted wafer prices starting in the second half of 2026.
In the letter, UMC attributed the price increase to continuously rising costs for raw materials, energy, logistics, and the procurement of key manufacturing equipment. It also emphasized that this move aims to continually enhance manufacturing efficiency and ensure high-quality wafer supply for its clients.
This price adjustment notification affects a wide range of entities. UMC's major customers include leading semiconductor design houses such as MediaTek, Intel, Qualcomm, Broadcom, Realtek, Novatek, and Texas Instruments, alongside numerous small and medium-sized chip companies. For these customers, accepting the price hike is almost the only option, given the generally tight global wafer foundry capacity.
The rationale for the increase combines rising costs with surging demand. UMC's statement listed multiple driving factors behind this price adjustment. The persistent rise in prices for raw materials, energy, and logistics has directly pushed up foundry costs, while procurement expenses for key manufacturing equipment have also increased significantly.
Concurrently, robust growth on the demand side provides further support for the price hike. UMC pointed out that demand across multiple application areas, including communications, industrial, artificial intelligence, and consumer electronics, is showing broad expansion.
The explosion in AI demand is particularly critical—this trend has permeated the entire technology industry, leading to an overall supply shortage in the global chain and triggering a ripple effect of price increases within the chip foundry sector.
In terms of industry position, UMC is a major global player. UMC currently ranks 42nd globally by market capitalization. Within the wafer foundry sector, it follows TSMC, Samsung, GlobalFoundries, and SMIC, making it one of the world's fifth-largest pure-play foundries.
Although UMC's strategy in advanced process nodes is less aggressive than TSMC's, it has built a solid market position in mature nodes, serving as a crucial capacity source for chip design companies in the communications, industrial, and consumer electronics sectors.
This price increase indicates that the supply-demand tension for mature process capacity is also significant and cannot be overlooked.
The industry impact involves cost pressure being passed downstream. UMC's decision to raise prices signifies that the global wafer foundry price hike wave is no longer confined to top-tier players like TSMC but is becoming common among major foundry providers.
For customers like MediaTek, Qualcomm, and Broadcom, the rise in foundry costs will directly compress profit margins for their chip businesses, a pressure that may ultimately be passed on to end-product prices.
UMC stated in its announcement that it will continue to work with partners to navigate the structural evolution of the global semiconductor landscape. However, given the current market supply and demand dynamics, the alternative options available to customers in the short term are extremely limited.