Meta CEO confirms multi-generation processor deal with Qualcomm
The partnership locks in custom Snapdragon silicon for Meta's XR hardware and AI ambitions, part of a broader push to secure dedicated chip supply lines
Meta isn’t just buying chips anymore. It’s locking down entire product roadmaps with the companies that make them.
CEO Mark Zuckerberg has confirmed a multi-generation processor agreement with Qualcomm, ensuring that custom Snapdragon silicon will power Meta’s extended reality hardware and AI workloads for the foreseeable future. The deal isn’t a one-off procurement contract. It’s a long-term commitment that ties the two companies together across multiple hardware cycles.
From handshake to hardware pipeline
The relationship between Meta and Qualcomm isn’t new. The two companies first announced a multi-year collaboration at IFA 2022, focused on building custom Snapdragon platforms for Meta’s XR devices. That partnership produced the chips running inside Meta’s Quest headsets, which remain the dominant consumer VR hardware on the market.
What’s changed is the scope. The upgraded agreement extends across multiple processor generations, meaning Qualcomm will be designing silicon specifically tailored to Meta’s needs well into the future.
A broader silicon strategy takes shape
Qualcomm isn’t the only chipmaker getting a long-term commitment from Meta. The company has also secured multi-generation agreements with both Broadcom and AMD, signaling a coordinated strategy to lock in custom silicon across its entire technology stack.
Meta is spending aggressively on AI infrastructure, from training massive models like Llama to deploying inference capabilities across its family of apps. By splitting its chip partnerships across Qualcomm, Broadcom, and AMD, Meta is building a diversified supply chain for custom processors. Qualcomm handles the edge devices and XR hardware. AMD and Broadcom cover different segments of the data center and networking infrastructure.
Why crypto markets should pay attention
Meta’s metaverse ambitions have always been intertwined with the broader vision of virtual economies. Meta’s investment in Llama and other generative AI models adds another layer, with AI inference on lightweight devices making use cases around digital wallets and virtual commerce practical rather than theoretical.
Meta securing multi-generation chip agreements with Qualcomm, Broadcom, and AMD raises the barrier to entry for anyone else trying to build competing XR platforms.