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Intel’s first 7nm chips now delayed to 2022/2023, as rivals streak ahead
August 14, 2025
In the race for denser and smaller chips, Intel is getting further behind. After it seemingly overcame its 10nm setbacks earlier this year, the Californian company has now confirmed further delays to its7nm process.
Earlier this year, Intel rolled out its 10th-generation desktop CPUs codenamed Comet Lake based on a 14nm process and 10nm Ice Lake chips for ultrabooks. Now, according to its Q2 2020earnings release(h/t:Tom’s Hardware), the company expects its desktop 10nm chips to arrive by 2021. They were initially expected to ship in 2016.

But 7nm seems to be the real unobtanium for the company. Its 7nm CPUs may now only arrive in late 2022 or at the beginning of 2023, five years later than planned. Interestingly, it’s now likely that Intel’s first GPUs based on a 7nm process will arrive by 2022. Server chips have also been delayed by a year to 2023.
Intel blamed yield issues with its 7nm process for the new delay, with the firm recently identifying a “defect mode” in its process as a problem as well.
The news also comes afterAppleannounced plans to develop its own Arm-based CPUs for Macs at WWDC 2020, ditching Intel’s silicon.
The race to 7nm: Already over?
While Intel is still rolling out 14nm chipsets, its contemporaries are comfortably below 10nm.
Its desktop CPU rival AMD in mid-2019 released its Zen 2 architecture, employing CPUs based on a 7nm node from TSMC. In January this year, itdebutedits first 7nm CPU for laptops.
According to a report byDigitimesin April, TSMC expects its 3nm process to be ready for volume production by 2022. It also fabricated HiSilicon’sKirin 980chipset, HUAWEI’s first based on the 7nm process.
See also:What is an SoC? Everything you need to know about smartphone chipsets
Samsung’s foundries moved over to the 14nm process in 2016 with the debut of theExynos 7500 series. TheExynos 990, which was used in theGalaxy S20series, is based on a 7nm LPP process.
Qualcomm debuted its 7nm process with theSnapdragon 855last year, while MediaTek’sDimensity 1000also used a similar process and arrived late last year. MediaTek also this week announced itsDimensity 720line, which will put 7nm chipsets with 5G support into cheaper devices.
The quest for smaller manufacturing processes, or die shrinks, isn’t a trivial goal. The more transistors foundries can pack onto a piece of silicon, the smaller a chip can be. This has become imperative for chipset makers to achieve higher clock speeds and better efficiency. However judging by Intel’s ongoing issues, even the biggest firms can struggle in this race.
Next:How long do chipmakers support their processors with Android updates?
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