Insight: Why Micron’s Singapore NAND Expansion Marks a New Phase of Capacity Planning
2 Min Read January 28, 2026
Micron’s $24B Singapore expansion shores up NAND output through complex node shifts, restoring flexibility as capacity planning pivots beyond DRAM.

Micron’s recent announcement to expand its Singapore NAND manufacturing footprint highlights a growing structural constraint in memory production: sustaining wafer output through advanced technology transitions. The roughly US $24 billion, two-story cleanroom expansion is designed less to drive near-term capacity growth and more to prevent output erosion as process complexity and cycle times increase. TechInsights’ NAND supply modeling had already incorporated the need for a Singapore expansion to preserve wafer output, and Micron’s announcement validates that assumption. Beyond maintaining continuity, the project restores strategic flexibility, creating optionality for incremental capacity if market conditions warrant. More broadly, the move may signal a shift away from DRAM/HBM-centric expansion narratives toward resilience-focused NAND capacity planning as the current memory upcycle develops.
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