SANTA CLARA, California, December 24, 2025: Nvidia Corporation is preparing to resume exports of its H200 artificial intelligence chips to China by mid-February 2026, marking the company’s first shipments of the high-performance processors to Chinese customers since the United States eased certain export restrictions earlier this month. The planned resumption of shipments follows a shift in U.S. trade policy that allows Nvidia to supply advanced chips under newly defined regulatory parameters. According to confirmed company correspondence and regulatory filings, Nvidia has scheduled initial deliveries to major Chinese technology firms ahead of the Lunar New Year period. The first shipment will include between 5,000 and 10,000 H200 chip modules, representing roughly 40,000 to 80,000 individual units.

The shipments are expected to originate from existing production batches allocated for international distribution and will be subject to standard export and customs clearances. The H200 chip, part of Nvidia’s Hopper architecture series, is designed for high-performance computing and large-scale artificial intelligence model training. It delivers substantial gains in processing speed and energy efficiency compared with the earlier H100 and A800 models. The return of the H200 to the Chinese market represents a key commercial development for Nvidia, which has faced a decline in sales to China since the United States imposed stringent export curbs on advanced semiconductors in 2023. Earlier this month, the U.S. government confirmed that it would authorize limited exports of Nvidia’s H200 chips to China, provided companies comply with a 25 percent federal fee on sales and adhere to end-user verification requirements.
The policy adjustment followed a comprehensive review of semiconductor export rules aimed at balancing commercial competitiveness with national security considerations. The H200 shipments will proceed under the same licensing framework that currently governs sales of other high-performance computing components. Nvidia has not disclosed the identities of its Chinese customers, but industry records indicate that large domestic firms engaged in cloud computing and artificial intelligence development have submitted import requests since the restrictions were eased. The company’s export plans are consistent with established U.S. trade compliance processes, and no exemptions or waivers beyond the publicly announced guidelines have been reported.
Export approval signals partial reopening of AI chip trade
U.S. lawmakers have called for transparency in how export licenses for advanced chips are reviewed and approved. Members of the Senate and House of Representatives have asked the Commerce Department to make public its procedures for evaluating applications involving high-performance computing equipment, including the H200. The department has stated that each request undergoes a standardized assessment to ensure conformity with existing export control regulations and international commitments. Nvidia’s resumption of exports is expected to help restore part of its revenue flow from China, which accounted for nearly a quarter of the company’s data center business before the export restrictions took effect. The company’s financial reports for the second half of 2025 showed continued growth in global demand for AI computing infrastructure, led by data centers in North America, Europe, and the Middle East.
Expanding supply to international markets remains a priority for the firm as it seeks to balance capacity among regions. Production of the H200 chip is handled by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) using its 4-nanometer process. Nvidia has secured additional manufacturing slots for 2026 to support higher output levels, reflecting the ongoing demand for advanced GPUs in data-intensive industries. The company continues to work within existing U.S. export frameworks to maintain compliance while meeting global customer requirements. Nvidia’s stock rose in recent trading sessions following confirmation of its China export plans. Investors responded positively to indications that the company’s access to one of the world’s largest markets for AI hardware would be partially restored.
Nvidia expands production capacity to meet renewed demand
Analysts tracking semiconductor supply chains noted that the decision is likely to stabilize pricing and ease inventory imbalances across the sector after months of uncertainty surrounding U.S.-China technology trade. The resumption of H200 exports underscores the evolving landscape of semiconductor trade policy between the United States and China. While regulatory oversight remains stringent, the controlled re-entry of advanced chip shipments signals a recalibration of commercial relations in the high-technology sector. Nvidia’s adherence to the current licensing structure reflects a coordinated approach between corporate compliance and government oversight in managing sensitive technology exports. The move also highlights the semiconductor industry’s broader recovery trajectory, as companies adapt to shifting global regulations, strengthen supply resilience, and pursue balanced growth across multiple regional markets amid ongoing geopolitical realignments. – By Content Syndication Services.
