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FindArticles > News > Technology

Apple Moves iPhone Production Around the World

Gregory Zuckerman
Last updated: November 24, 2025 6:06 am
By Gregory Zuckerman
Technology
6 Min Read
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The iPhone is the first truly global device. Though the box might say “Made in China” or “Made in India,” the device in your hand is the result of a supply chain that traverses several continents, thousands of components, and dozens of specialized suppliers.

Analysts estimate that Apple ships more than 230 million iPhones in a given year, and holds a significant proportion of the US market, according to IDC and Counterpoint Research. That scale is why Apple keeps diversifying where components come from and where final assembly takes place.

Table of Contents
  • What ‘Made In’ Really Means on an iPhone
  • The Anatomy of the Component Supply Chain
  • Where Final Assembly Happens for iPhones Today
  • Why the shift is speeding up across Apple’s supply chain
  • What the evolving manufacturing mix means for buyers
  • The bottom line on Apple’s global iPhone production
A pink iPhone 13, with its front and back visible, set against a professional flat design background with soft pink and white gradients and subtle diagonal line patterns.

What ‘Made In’ Really Means on an iPhone

The country on the back of an iPhone does not mean that is where every part was produced. Apple’s annual Supplier List documents a network of partners throughout East Asia, the United States, and Europe that supply chips, sensors, glass, batteries, and other components to get to assembly partners responsible for putting it all together.

This is how the system works: to manage quality, scale, cost, and risk. And it allows Apple to dual-source critical components, so a disruption in any one region does not disrupt global launches.

The Anatomy of the Component Supply Chain

The iPhone’s brain, Apple’s A‑series chip, is made in California and also fabbed by TSMC in Taiwan using leading-edge 5nm (and future even more advanced 3nm) processes. Qualcomm modems control cellular connectivity, and RF parts are commonly supplied by Broadcom and Skyworks.

These displays typically come courtesy of Samsung Display and LG Display, though BOE in China is increasingly getting into the mix. Memory comes from SK hynix and Kioxia. Camera sensors are ordered mainly from Sony; lenses also come from Largan Precision and others. Audio and power-management silicon often includes Cirrus Logic, Texas Instruments, and Renesas.

Corning supplies hardened glass from various countries (the US, Japan, and Taiwan), and battery packs are generally cobbled together by Sunwoda and Desay. Apple has also moved upstream on raw materials, releasing goals for recycled cobalt and rare earths in its Environmental Progress Report to cut exposure to volatile mining supply chains.

Where Final Assembly Happens for iPhones Today

China continues to be the assembly center of the iPhone. Foxconn has an enormous factory campus in Zhengzhou — often dubbed iPhone City — that employs hundreds of thousands of workers and can produce as many as 500,000 iPhones a day, according to reports by Reuters and others. Pegatron and Luxshare also manufacture iPhones at factories in China.

Apple’s strategy is growing the fastest in India. Foxconn in Sriperumbudur, Tamil Nadu, puts together at least the current‑generation iPhone models hot on their release heels, alongside assemblers Pegatron and Tata Electronics. Counterpoint Research and JPMorgan estimate iPhone assembly’s share in India will head toward the 20–25% zone.

Four smartphones in white, orange, dark blue, and black, arranged in a row against a professional flat design background with soft patterns.

Vietnam does not currently manufacture iPhones en masse, but it is essential to Apple’s ecosystem. Nikkei Asia reported that it is home to AirPods, Apple Watch, and parts of iPad and Mac production. It has camera modules, connectors, and other subassemblies made in Vietnam that supply iPhone lines elsewhere, trimming logistics routes across Asia.

Why the shift is speeding up across Apple’s supply chain

Apple and its counterparts have adopted a China Plus One strategy to lessen dependence on any single country. Trade tensions and the risks of tariffs have increased costs for China-origin goods; news organizations like Bloomberg and The Wall Street Journal have reported that Apple has airlifted product to work around policy deadlines.

India’s Production Linked Incentive program sweetens the economics for local manufacturing, while a 22% customs duty on imported smartphones makes it attractive for even assembling domestically from a pricing perspective. Vietnam, meanwhile, provides deep export infrastructure and a pool of skilled workers accustomed to making electronics — as well as close proximity to suppliers based in China, Taiwan, Japan, and Korea.

The result is a more durable, multicountry footprint that enables stable launch schedules and insulates against regional disruptions — whether from public health concerns, geopolitics, or logistics bottlenecks.

What the evolving manufacturing mix means for buyers

There are no distinctions in specs, tooling, or quality controls between the iPhones made in China and those put together in India. Because of Apple’s supplier audits and process constraints, a device purchased in Mumbai or Miami is functionally identical, irrespective of where it was assembled.

Diversification can also reduce delivery times in key markets and the impact of tariffs on prices. In areas like India, local assembly is partly there to facilitate equalizing retail prices with global levels by decreasing import duties.

The bottom line on Apple’s global iPhone production

The iPhone is made largely in China and India, but it’s built everywhere: chips from Taiwan; displays from Korea, the United States, and China; glass from the United States and Japan; cameras from Japan — you get the idea — not to mention countless parts that come through Southeast Asia. But Vietnam is emerging as one of the biggest sources for components and other Apple devices. That distributed network is the way Apple manages to deliver hundreds of millions of iPhones with clockwork regularity.

Gregory Zuckerman
ByGregory Zuckerman
Gregory Zuckerman is a veteran investigative journalist and financial writer with decades of experience covering global markets, investment strategies, and the business personalities shaping them. His writing blends deep reporting with narrative storytelling to uncover the hidden forces behind financial trends and innovations. Over the years, Gregory’s work has earned industry recognition for bringing clarity to complex financial topics, and he continues to focus on long-form journalism that explores hedge funds, private equity, and high-stakes investing.
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