When you think of Tamil Nadu electronics exports, the state’s booming output of smartphones, circuit boards, and consumer electronics shipped globally. Also known as India’s electronics powerhouse, it’s not just another manufacturing state—it’s the engine behind nearly 40% of India’s total electronics exports. This isn’t luck. It’s the result of focused policy, skilled labor, and a dense network of factories that turn raw materials into high-demand tech products.
Tamil Nadu doesn’t just make electronics—it makes them for the world. Companies like Foxconn, Samsung, and Dixon Technologies have built massive plants in Sriperumbudur and Chennai, turning the region into a global supplier of smartphones and components. These factories don’t just serve India’s domestic market; they ship to Europe, the U.S., and Southeast Asia. The state’s electronics manufacturing ecosystem, a mix of large-scale assembly plants and small component suppliers works like a well-oiled machine. Nearby ports in Chennai and Tuticorin make shipping fast and cheap. And unlike other states that rely on imports for parts, Tamil Nadu now produces over 70% of its own electronic components locally.
The state’s government incentives, including tax breaks, land subsidies, and fast-track approvals for tech firms have pulled in billions in foreign investment. In 2024 alone, Tamil Nadu accounted for more than $12 billion in electronics exports—more than the entire electronics output of countries like Vietnam and Thailand. This growth isn’t slowing. New clusters are forming around Coimbatore for industrial electronics and Hosur for battery manufacturing. Even small startups are thriving, thanks to incubators that help them scale from garage prototypes to export-ready products.
What makes Tamil Nadu different? It’s not just the factories. It’s the people. The state has one of India’s highest concentrations of engineering graduates, especially in electronics and automation. Local polytechnics train workers in SMT assembly, PCB testing, and quality control—skills that global brands demand. You won’t find this level of specialized talent in most other Indian states.
Below, you’ll find real stories and data from the front lines of this boom—how startups are breaking into global markets, why Tamil Nadu beats China on cost for certain products, and which companies are quietly dominating exports you’ve never heard of. This isn’t theory. It’s what’s happening right now, on the ground, in factories and shipping yards across the state.
Tamil Nadu leads India’s electronics exports in 2025, powered by Apple’s supply chain. See the latest data, how it compares with Karnataka and UP, and what could change next.
Electronics Manufacturing