The global semiconductor industry is entering one of the most aggressive expansion cycles in its history, and engineering outsourcing is emerging as a critical growth engine. According to new research released by Neovay Global, outsourced semiconductor engineering is expected to nearly double from $8 billion in 2025 to $15–16 billion by 2030, fuelled by rising chip complexity, hyperscaler innovation, and the rapid adoption of AI and advanced packaging.
This surge accompanies a broader market expansion, with global semiconductor sales projected to grow from ~$700 billion in 2025 to over $1 trillion by 2030. Most of the outsourcing demand is concentrated in digital chips (Logic, GPU, MPU), which account for 75% of all outsourced engineering opportunities, followed by analog chips at 25%.
Where the Outsourcing Spend Is Going
Neovay’s study breaks down the $8 billion engineering outsourcing market for 2025 as follows:
$3.5 billion – System validation
$3.1 billion – Silicon design services
$1.5 billion – Post-silicon validation
These categories reflect the growing pressure on chipmakers to accelerate tape-outs, reduce verification time, and support multi-node development — all while managing rising R&D expenses.
In 2025 alone, semiconductor companies spent ~$120 billion on R&D, representing 17% of total revenue. The top 25 semiconductor firms drove most of this demand, supported by large outsourcing cycles from hyperscalers such as Microsoft, Google, and Amazon, whose chip investments grew sharply due to AI and data center expansion.
A Fragmented but Expanding Vendor Landscape
Despite rapid scaling, the market remains highly fragmented:
No single vendor holds more than 5% share
Global Tier-1 IT services: 14%
Indian ER&D + semiconductor specialists: 11%
Pure-play China: 6%
Taiwan: 7%
Europe: 6%
The absence of dominant suppliers signals strong headroom for specialised players with domain depth, AI-enabled design flows, and scalable lab infrastructure.
India’s Semiconductor Workforce Becomes a Global Force
The report highlights India’s emergence as one of the world’s most influential semiconductor engineering hubs.
India hosts 60+ semiconductor GCCs from global majors including:
Texas Instruments
Intel
Qualcomm
AMD
Nvidia
NXP
Infineon
STMicroelectronics
Microchip
Marvell
Broadcom
Collectively, these centers employ 65,000+ engineers, with 20% staffed through outsourced service providers for roles such as:
Overflow verification
Post-silicon validation
Compliance testing
Embedded systems engineering
This hybrid structure — GCC-led innovation supported by scalable domestic service partners — is becoming a major competitive advantage for India.
Industry Leaders Call the 2025–2030 Period a “Golden Window”
Industry leaders quoted in the report describe this decade as a defining period for India’s semiconductor ecosystem:
“With outsourced engineering spend set to exceed $15 billion by 2030, Indian providers have a rare five-year window to scale from niche specialists to indispensable end-to-end silicon partners.”
— Praveen Bhadada, CEO & MD, Neovay Global
“India’s design talent, AI adoption, and lab maturity are now world-class. As global outsourcing crosses $14 billion, India will anchor the next decade of semiconductor innovation.”
— Srini Chinamilli, Co-founder & CEO, Tessolve
What Will Differentiate the Winners by 2030
Neovay’s analysis outlines the capabilities that will define market leaders over the next five years:
Deep domain expertise in digital, mixed-signal, and chiplet-ready architectures
Elastic capacity management for peak tape-out cycles
Multi-node and advanced packaging proficiency
Strong integration with fabs, OSATs, and EDA toolchains
AI-driven design and validation workflows
Turnkey lab infrastructure for post-silicon testing
Providers who combine these strengths will significantly outgrow the broader market and position themselves as strategic partners to global semiconductor firms.
A Decade of Record Growth Ahead
The semiconductor sector’s inherent cyclicality remains — but the long-term direction is clear. With AI, automotive electrification, HPC, hyperscaler chips, and 5G/6G networks accelerating silicon demand, Neovay Global expects engineering outsourcing to become a core pillar of the global chip value chain.
For India, the next five years represent a defining opportunity to scale from a fast-growing contributor to a global semiconductor powerhouse.
