Elon Musk demonstrates first sample of Tesla AI5 processor, accidentally thanks TSC rather than TSMC  — claims 40X performance boost over the predecessor

Tesla
(Image credit: Tesla)

Elon Musk on Wednesday showcased an image of one of the first samples of Tesla's AI5 hardware that will be used to drive AI applications in Tesla's cars, Optimus robots, and potentially xAI data centers. The AI5 processor is about half of the reticle size, uses industry-standard memory, and yet can be up to 40X faster than AI4 in certain scenarios, according to Elon Musk.

"Congrats to the Tesla_AI chip design team on taping out AI5," Elon Musk wrote in an X post. "AI6, Dojo 3 and other exciting chips in [the works]. […] And thank you to @TaiwanSemi_TSC and Samsung for your support in bringing this chip to production! It will be one of most produced AI chips ever."

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"I think the Tesla chip team is really designing an incredible chip here: by some metrics the AI5 chip will be 40 times better than the AI4 chip," Elon Musk said during Tesla's Q3 2025 earnings call. "As a result of [outdated hardware] deletions, we can actually fit AI5 [on a] half [of a] reticle with good margin for the traces from the memory to the Tesla trip accelerators, the Arm CPU cores, and PCIe blocks."

Although Musk claims that the AI5 has just been 'taped out' (which means that the final chip design has been sent to a photomask house), he actually shows an already fabricated processor with a 'KR 2613' marking on it, which suggests that the ASIC was packaged on the 13th week of 2026. Musk also mentions Taiwan Semiconductor (TSC) and Samsung for bringing the chip to production, though we are not sure that the producer of passive components has anything to do with bringing the AI5 processor to production. More likely, Musk meant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., better known as TSMC.

Previously, the head of Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI said that the AI5 would be made by both TSMC and Samsung Foundry, though we do not know which contract chipmaker fabbed the current sample. Assuming that Tesla got the chip in March or early April and no re-spin is required, it is reasonable to expect the company to deploy the processor sometimes in 2027.

Perhaps the most intriguing part of the announcement is that Tesla has apparently not given up on the Dojo system-on-wafer (SoW) processor for AI training, and the Dojo 3 processor is in the works. It was reported last August that the Dojo wafer-level processor initiative had been abandoned and the team behind it dismantled. Indeed, Peter Bannon, the head of the Dojo project at Tesla, retired last August, according to his LinkedIn page. Elon Musk said in July that the AI6 and Dojo 3 could feature a converged architecture (a converged ISA, we would speculate), which would enable the company to unify its software stack and could potentially allow the company to unify its hardware stack as well.

"I think about Dojo 3 and the AI6 as the first [converged architecture designs]," Musk said in a July 23 earnings call (via Investing.com). "It seems like intuitively, we want to try to find convergence there where it is basically the same chip that is used where we use, say, two of them in a car or an Optimus and maybe a larger number on a on a [server] board, a kind of 5 - 12 twelve on a board or something like that. […] That sort of seems like intuitively the sensible way to go."

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Anton Shilov
Contributing Writer

Anton Shilov is a contributing writer at Tom’s Hardware. Over the past couple of decades, he has covered everything from CPUs and GPUs to supercomputers and from modern process technologies and latest fab tools to high-tech industry trends.

  • Scott_Tx
    They need to invent a new memory just for AI so we can have our damn PCs back.
    Reply
  • usertests
    Scott_Tx said:
    They need to invent a new memory just for AI so we can have our damn PCs back.
    They did. Such as HBM (although it predated the AI craze) and more recently SOCAMM, or High Bandwidth Flash as a hybrid memory-storage solution. It doesn't matter since the same fabs that make memory or NAND would be making the stuff.

    What will bring the market to normalcy is some combination of increased production and lower AI demand, which many assume will happen. Then by the mid-2030s, 3D DRAM could be available for DDR6 DIMMs and other products, allowing capacities to skyrocket and $/GB to fall.
    Reply
  • ezst036
    Admin said:
    Elon Musk demonstrates first sample of Tesla AI5 processor, accidentally thanks TSC rather than TSMC
    This is extremely petty and vindictive journalism.

    We all make mistakes, I'd like to meet the person who does not make mistakes.
    Reply
  • Dntknwitall
    usertests said:
    They did. Such as HBM (although it predated the AI craze) and more recently SOCAMM, or High Bandwidth Flash as a hybrid memory-storage solution. It doesn't matter since the same fabs that make memory or NAND would be making the stuff.

    What will bring the market to normalcy is some combination of increased production and lower AI demand, which many assume will happen. Then by the mid-2030s, 3D DRAM could be available for DDR6 DIMMs and other products, allowing capacities to skyrocket and $/GB

    usertests said:
    we will never see dram at the prices pre AI bubble. Take those prices and add about 30% and those will be what the prices will be at when this is all over. Now that dram manufacturers have tasted the blood they will not be letting pricing drop to those prices ever again.
    Reply
  • usertests
    @Dntknwitall It's a cool narrative (nice quote job) but the memory industry faces competition from each other, including China. And they are going to make new densities of memory that are cheaper to manufacture, no matter what the demand is.

    They are using 32 Gb dies now (in the new 64 GB UDIMMs launched last year), will probably get to 48-64 Gb within the next few years, and 3D DRAM will likely enable something in the 128 Gb to 256 Gb range at the time of introduction. They will scale that up as much as possible in the 2030s-2040s, like 3D NAND has reached 300+ layers now.

    We will only "never" see pre-AI pricing if the bubble never pops, and AI demand never ceases.
    Reply
  • PEnns
    ezst036 said:
    This is extremely petty and vindictive journalism.

    We all make mistakes, I'd like to meet the person who does not make mistakes.

    I think chill- pills are still affordable.....
    Reply
  • razor512
    ezst036 said:
    This is extremely petty and vindictive journalism.

    We all make mistakes, I'd like to meet the person who does not make mistakes.
    Agreed, and even more strange to do it, and then proceeds to make a typo as well.

    https://i.imgur.com/TviH8Pl.png
    Overall poor journalism as such behavior discredits reporting as it makes it appear that the coverage is leaning towards being a biased hit piece rather than trying to present the news. That is fine if someone is doing an opinion piece, but not okay if someone is trying to report the news.
    Reply
  • razor512
    Scott_Tx said:
    They need to invent a new memory just for AI so we can have our damn PCs back.
    Much of the DRAM price increases seem to be due to price fixing as the behavior has similarities to pricing behavior in the past when we ended up with settlements for price fixing.

    The timing of the sudden astronomical price increases doesn't make much sense considering that the extreme AI demand for RAM started a few years ago. Even worse, we saw prices for DDR5 trend down while companies were scaling up their AI related deployments and data center expansions.

    While extreme demand can impact pricing, the extent of the increases seem very suspicious.
    Reply
  • usertests
    Wccftech had the worst typo, calling it A15 and A16 instead of AI5 and AI6 from top to bottom. It's still there, haha: https://wccftech.com/tesla-a15-ai-chip-tape-out-elon-musk-shares-first-pictures-confirms-a16-dojo3-in-work/
    Reply
  • JohnyFin
    Money start finishing so time is for collecting new losers for buying stock papers. New fresh idea but same scheme. Musk always selling dreams....
    Reply