Samsung has significantly ramped up its DRAM chip deliveries to Tesla during April 2026, according to an industry report from Korean publication Edaily released on April 21.
Samsung SDI Co., Ltd., 0L2T.L
The semiconductor manufacturer has increased its 8GB GDDR6 DRAM shipments to the electric vehicle company by a factor of four when compared to monthly delivery volumes recorded throughout the initial three months of 2026.
Tesla has been grappling with component supply constraints that have hindered its manufacturing operations. These memory modules are critical for powering the company’s entertainment platforms and autonomous vehicle technology.
Samsung responded by increasing manufacturing output at its Hwaseong manufacturing complex located in South Korea. This site has emerged as a primary production center for satisfying Tesla’s chip requirements.
Both corporations are working within the framework of a comprehensive semiconductor supply contract executed during 2025. The agreement carries an estimated value of roughly $16.5 billion.
Samsung is positioning itself to manufacture cutting-edge artificial intelligence processors for Tesla at its semiconductor fabrication facility in Texas. Manufacturing operations are anticipated to launch during the latter half of 2026.
This development represents a significant deepening of the Samsung-Tesla collaboration beyond conventional memory chip supply, extending into sophisticated semiconductor manufacturing capabilities.
Worldwide memory chip availability has faced significant constraints since the middle of 2025, primarily fueled by escalating requirements from artificial intelligence applications. This widespread shortage has created challenges for automotive manufacturers like Tesla in obtaining necessary components.
Samsung has simultaneously been reallocating portions of its manufacturing capacity toward high-bandwidth memory (HBM) products, which command premium pricing and face intense demand from AI processor purchasers. NVIDIA represents one of the key purchasers of Samsung’s HBM production.
This production reallocation has intensified constraints on standard DRAM availability, making it increasingly difficult for Tesla to source components through conventional market channels.
Samsung’s choice to multiply TSLA supply by four indicates the automotive manufacturer possesses sufficient market influence — and contractual advantages — to obtain preferential allocation despite tight market conditions.
Tesla maintains a market capitalization of roughly $1.45 trillion. The electric vehicle producer shipped approximately 1.64 million units worldwide throughout 2025.
Tesla shares declined 1.55% while Samsung stock fell 0.68% during the reporting period.
The post Samsung Boosts Tesla (TSLA) DRAM Deliveries by 400% in April 2026 appeared first on Blockonomi.


