Huawei AI Chip Sales Target Grows as China Cuts Nvidia Use


TL;DR

  • Huawei Sales: Huawei is expected to reach US$12 billion in 2026 AI chip sales as Chinese buyers shift more orders away from Nvidia.
  • Demand Driver: DeepSeek’s V4 launch and stronger Ascend demand point to faster adoption of domestic accelerator clusters and related infrastructure.
  • Supply Limit: Export controls and foundry constraints may still cap how many Huawei chips can ship, even if demand keeps rising.

Huawei is expected to reach US$12 billion in AI chip sales in 2026 as buyers steer orders away from Nvidia.

Huawei could also capture China’s biggest AI chip share this year, which shows how large the domestic accelerator shift has become.

Chinese demand is shifting because companies are trying to secure more local compute as supply access now matters almost as much as benchmark performance. Earlier moves toward homegrown accelerators and China’s wider push for self-sufficiency could lift Huawei toward a reported US$12 billion in AI chip sales this year.

Huawei’s accelerator revenue could still rise 60% or more this year, even if buyers keep Nvidia systems in parts of their fleets. A partial move of training and inference orders toward domestic suppliers would be enough to change supplier rankings and revenue share.

China’s Buyer Shift Drives the Near-Term Story

China’s increased domestic AI chip output drive matters because export controls had already added urgency to domestic chip development by February 2026. That pressure pushed Chinese companies to weigh supply certainty more heavily against raw benchmark performance. Procurement teams that validate local accelerator clusters also commit engineering time to model tuning, framework support and data-center integration, making an initial board order harder to reverse than a short-lived spot purchase.

Enterprise customers extend that shift because a first working cluster often pulls in more infrastructure. Networking gear, maintenance contracts, software support and later inference deployments can follow the initial accelerator decision, so a foothold in one data center can widen into a broader platform relationship. That repeat-spending path helps explain how a buyer shift can translate into revenue growth faster than a simple unit-shipment comparison would suggest.