Beyond AI accelerators, ByteDance is moving to secure its general-purpose compute foundation. Reuters reported on May 28, 2026, that the company is developing its own server CPUs using two parallel architecture tracks: one based on Arm and another on the open-source RISC-V instruction set .
The motivation is a classic build-vs-buy calculus made urgent by supply chain pain. Intel and AMD have reportedly raised server CPU prices by 10% to 35% in recent months, with Intel warning Chinese customers of six-month delivery delays . For a company planning a massive rollout of agent-based services, these are unacceptable constraints. ByteDance's custom CPUs are intended for its own data centers to support internal operations and platforms like Coze, its AI agent development environment
. The dual-ISA approach acts as a hedge, allowing ByteDance to evaluate which architecture best fits its long-term needs for performance, cost, and geopolitical resilience
.
On May 26, 2026, Bloomberg reported that Qualcomm had struck a deal to supply ByteDance with millions of custom application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) for its AI data centers . This is not a simple chip purchase. Multiple reports clarify that the deal is a combined procurement and manufacturing agreement where Qualcomm will help turn ByteDance's in-house chip designs into mass-producible silicon, using foundries like TSMC
.
The primary use case for these ASICs is to power ByteDance's AI agent software, most notably its 'Doubao' AI agent . This partnership is a significant win for Qualcomm as it expands from smartphone processors into the AI data center market, and it provides ByteDance with a pipeline of custom, workload-optimized silicon that operates within the bounds of U.S. export compliance, a strategy some reports call a "pixel-perfect compliance design"
.
Underpinning these recent moves is an older, foundational partnership. ByteDance has been working with Broadcom and TSMC to co-develop custom AI GPUs, often referenced under the "SeedChip" codename. Reports from 2024 indicated ByteDance was working with TSMC to manufacture two AI chips on a 5nm process—one for training and one for inference—with mass production expected in 2026 . While there were conflicting reports at the time, with ByteDance denying plans to replace Nvidia in the short term
, the subsequent flurry of CPU and LPU activity shows the custom silicon strategy has only deepened and expanded.
ByteDance is now a confirmed customer for Broadcom's custom AI silicon platform, which uses advanced 3.5D packaging techniques, placing the TikTok owner on a custom chip roster alongside Google and Meta .
These chip strategies are not academic exercises; they are the infrastructure foundation for an extraordinarily ambitious AI product roadmap. ByteDance's 2026 AI budget is reported to be roughly 160 billion yuan, up from 150 billion yuan in 2025, with 85 billion yuan earmarked specifically for AI processors .
This spending is driven by the economics of inference. As AI agent-based products like Coze and Doubao scale to hundreds of millions of users, the cost-per-token for generating responses becomes the primary business metric. Buying millions of expensive, supply-constrained GPUs from Nvidia is a financial and strategic risk. Developing custom LPU-style chips for low-cost inference, custom CPUs to avoid x86 price surges, and custom ASICs for agent workloads is a direct assault on that risk.
ByteDance's strategy is best understood not as an attempt to "replace Nvidia," but as a methodical decoupling. Use Nvidia hardware where it is available and unmatched, like for cutting-edge model training, while building an entire parallel stack of custom silicon for the high-volume inference workloads that the business will increasingly rely on. It's a multi-pronged blueprint for AI compute sovereignty in an age of technological fragmentation.
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