Elon Musk announced that Tesla's next-generation AI5 chip is almost complete, with early work already underway on AI6 and plans for a nine-month development cycle for future iterations. The chips are expected to become the highest-volume AI processors globally, powering vehicles, robots, and more. This update highlights Tesla's aggressive push in AI hardware for autonomy and beyond.
Elon Musk, Tesla's CEO, shared an update on the company's AI chip progress via a post on X on January 17, 2026. He stated, “Our AI5 chip design is almost done and AI6 is in early stages, but there will be AI7, AI8, AI9 … aiming for a 9 month design cycle.” Musk predicted these in-house chips will be “the highest volume AI chips in the world by far,” adding a recruiting call: “Join us to work on what I predict will be the highest volume AI chips in the world by far!” This roadmap accelerates Tesla's silicon development, building on over 12 years of in-house hardware evolution, from Hardware 1 with Mobileye in 2014-2016 to the current AI4 in recent Model S and X vehicles, which feature 5-megapixel cameras and have earned top safety ratings from ANCAP and Euro NCAP, including best-in-class for Model 3 and Y in 2025 assessments announced in January 2026. The AI5, also known as Hardware 5, promises up to 50 times the performance of AI4, supporting Full Self-Driving, Robotaxi capabilities, Optimus humanoid robots, Neuralink, data centers, and robotics. Production will involve TSMC in Arizona using a 3nm process and Samsung in Texas with 2nm, targeting small-scale output in 2026 and high-volume in 2027. AI6 is slated for roughly twice the performance, with mass production in mid-2028, backed by a $16.5 billion deal with Samsung. Community analyst Herbert Ong noted that rapid cycles enable “quicker learning, faster iteration, and a compounding advantage in AI and autonomy.” Tesla plans vehicle integration of AI5 no earlier than mid-2027, positioning the company as a leader in real-world AI applications.