Amazon Explores Selling Trainium AI Chips, Challenging Nvidia's Dominance

Amazon Web Services is in early discussions to sell its Trainium AI chips directly to external customers, potentially creating a $50 billion business and challenging Nvidia's dominance in AI hardware. CEO Andy Jassy hinted at the move in April, citing overwhelming demand.

By Inside AI June 19, 2026
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June 19, 2026, (Inside AI) — Amazon Web Services is exploring direct sales of its custom Trainium AI chips to external data center operators, a move that would pit the cloud leader against Nvidia in the AI hardware market.

AWS Senior Vice President Peter DeSantis confirmed to Bloomberg that discussions are underway. AWS spokesperson Doron Aronson told TechCrunch the company is open to future chip sales, though no timeline exists.

Trainium processors have until now powered AI workloads exclusively on AWS. Selling them outright would transform Amazon from a cloud provider into a chip vendor, directly challenging Nvidia's GPU dominance.

Why Amazon Might Sell Its AI Silicon

CEO Andy Jassy laid groundwork in April's shareholder letter. He estimated a standalone chip business could reach a $50 billion annual revenue run rate by serving both AWS and external buyers.

Jassy wrote that demand has been so high that selling racks of AI chips to outside organizations is a realistic possibility. That signals confidence in Trainium's performance and market pull.

Nvidia's AI GPU business now exceeds $300 billion in annual revenue. A $50 billion entrant would instantly become the second-largest player, reshaping competitive dynamics.

Supply Constraints Create a Strategic Dilemma

But Amazon faces a classic innovator's dilemma. Jassy noted that current Trainium chips sold out quickly, and pre-launch demand for Trainium4 already exceeds supply.

Selling chips externally could cannibalize AWS cloud capacity unless manufacturing scales dramatically. Amazon relies on TSMC, which also fabricates Nvidia's GPUs, creating potential bottlenecks.

DeSantis did not disclose how Amazon would balance internal cloud needs against external sales. The company has historically declined direct chip requests, making this reversal notable.

Nvidia's Expanding Ambitions Raise Stakes

The move comes as Nvidia pushes beyond GPUs into AI-focused CPUs, pressuring Intel and AMD. Amazon's entry would intensify multi-front competition in data center silicon.

If Amazon proceeds, it would turn AWS from Nvidia's largest cloud customer into a direct hardware rival. That could fracture partnerships and accelerate custom silicon adoption across the industry.

For now, Amazon calls the discussions exploratory. But the strategic logic is clear: owning the chip, the cloud, and the customer relationship could redefine AI infrastructure economics.

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