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The big picture: New reports suggest that TSMC's upcoming 2nm semiconductors are almost ready for prime time, with indications of very positive yields. Apple will likely unveil the first 2nm product in 2026, and other tech giants are already in line for TSMC's next bleeding-edge node. The Commercial Times reports that TSMC is set to begin taking orders for wafers built on its 2nm N2 node process next week. The semiconductor giant is likely on schedule to start mass production later this year, with the iPhone 18 Pro's A20 chip bringing the node to consumers in late 2026.TSMC's Kaohsiung plant will hold a production expansion ceremony on March 31, with orders scheduled to begin the next day. Progress has advanced smoothly, as the company's 2nm semiconductors reached 60 percent yields late last year and analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reports that it has since advanced well beyond that. Pursuing an aggressive strategy, TSMC aims to produce 50,000 wafers per week by the end of 2025.Unsurprisingly, Apple is first in line to adopt 2nm semiconductors for its chips. The company's iPhone 15 Pro was the first consumer device to utilize TSMC's 3nm node, and the iPhone 18 Pro will follow that trend late next year. Standard iPhone 18 models will likely employ a refined TSMC 3nm process.Other early 2nm adopters include Intel, AMD, Broadcom, and Amazon AWS. Although Intel is receiving some of its chips from TSMC, the company also aims to compete with its 18A node, which is scheduled for tape-out sometime during the first half of 2025. 18A will debut in Intel's Panther Lake laptop CPUs and Clearwater Forest server processors later this year, slightly ahead of TSMC's roadmap.The two upcoming nodes will introduce gate-all-around architectures, which reduce power leakage by managing electrical currents more closely. Power leakage is a growing problem as newer chips become smaller and pack more transistors into smaller spaces. 18A will also feature backside power delivery to improve performance, while TSMC plans to debut its take on the technology with next year's A16 node. // Related StoriesTSMC might charge $30,000 per 2nm wafer, but whether the number represents Apple's discount or the standard price remains unclear. For comparison, Apple currently pays $18,000 per 3nm wafer, but tariffs could raise that price to between $20,000 and $23,000. The rising costs of 3nm and 2nm semiconductors will likely trickle down to consumers.