Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company
CorpDigest
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company
Annual Revenue
Last reviewed: 2025-07-15 · By Swet Parvadiya
FY2024 Revenue
$90.0B
▲ 33.1% vs FY2023 ($67.6B)
Net Income: $35.0B
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company reported $90.0B in revenue for fiscal year 2024. This represents a growth of 33.1% compared to the 2023 figure of $67.6B.
TSMC earned $35 billion in net income on $90 billion in fiscal 2024 revenue — a 38.9% net margin that is extraordinary for any manufacturing company and that reflects genuine pricing power rather than accounting artifact. Gross margins ran at 53-54% in the second half of 2024. A company with $90 billion in revenue and a 39% net margin is generating earnings that most software companies with ten times the revenue cannot match. Revenue growth has been dramatic: $57.7 billion in fiscal 2021, $75.9 billion in fiscal 2022, a decline to $67.6 billion in fiscal 2023 as semiconductor demand corrected from pandemic-era overordering, and then $90 billion in fiscal 2024 as AI chip demand overwhelmed the correction. The $22.4 billion single-year increase from fiscal 2023 to fiscal 2024 is larger than the total annual revenue of most semiconductor companies. The Arizona fab investment has expanded from the initial $12 billion announcement to over $65 billion — the largest single manufacturing investment in American history. That capital commitment has been driven by US government incentives under the CHIPS Act and by customer pressure from Apple, NVIDIA, and AMD to maintain a manufacturing presence in the United States as a hedge against Taiwan-related supply disruption. The per-wafer cost at Arizona fabs will initially be higher than Taiwan operations, but TSMC has demonstrated that it can close cost gaps over time as yields improve and operations mature. The $900 billion market capitalization places TSMC at ten times fiscal 2024 revenue. That valuation has a specific basis: the company manufactures something that no other entity can manufacture at comparable volume, quality, or process sophistication, and demand for that something is growing faster than TSMC can build capacity. The geopolitical discount — which markets apply to the Taiwan concentration risk — is offset by the AI demand premium, producing a net valuation that reflects both the opportunity and the risk simultaneously.
| Year | Revenue | Net Income | YoY Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| FY2024 | $90.0B | $35.0B | +33.1% |
| FY2023 | $67.6B | — | -10.9% |
| FY2022 | $75.9B | — | +31.5% |
| FY2021 | $57.7B | — | +26.8% |
| FY2020 | $45.5B | — | — |
Source: SEC EDGAR filings, annual earnings releases, and verified financial disclosures.