Shanghai Opens New IC Design Park for Foreign Companies — Key Takeaways
On 15 March 2025, Shanghai officially inaugurated the Shanghai Lingang Integrated Circuit Design Industrial Park (上海临港集成电路设计产业园, Shànghǎi Língǎng Jíchéng Diànlù Shèjì Chǎnyè Yuán), a dedicated 300,000-square-meter facility aimed at attracting foreign semiconductor design firms. The park is positioned to host 120+ foreign-invested enterprises (外商投资企业, wàishāng tóuzī qǐyè) within three years, with total investment exceeding 5.2 billion RMB. This marks Shanghai’s most aggressive move yet to capture high-value IC design activities from global chip firms amid intensifying US-China technology rivalry.
What the New Park Offers to Foreign IC Design Firms
The Lingang park provides turnkey infrastructure for fabless semiconductor companies, including a shared EDA tool platform licensed from Synopsys and Cadence (valued at 800M RMB), a 300mm wafer prototyping line with access to SMIC’s 28nm and 14nm nodes, and dedicated 10Gbps data centers for cloud-based design verification. Foreign firms that register as wholly foreign-owned enterprises (外商独资企业, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè, WFOE) in the park receive a 15% corporate income tax rate for five years, compared to the standard 25% outside the park.
Subsidies include:
- Up to 50% reimbursement on EDA tool licensing costs (capped at 20M RMB per year)
- 30% rent subsidy for the first three years (office space at 8 RMB/sqm/day vs. average 15 RMB/sqm/day in Pudong)
- Fast-track work visas for 50+ foreign engineers per company
The park’s management team has stated that by 2028, Lingang’s IC design park aims to contribute 50 billion RMB to Shanghai’s semiconductor output, representing a 19% share of the city’s total 2024 IC output of 260 billion RMB.
Why Shanghai Is Doubling Down on IC Design
Shanghai’s IC design sector grew 12% year-on-year in 2024 to reach 165 billion RMB in revenue, driven by demand from automotive and AI chips. However, only 18% of Shanghai’s 800+ design firms are foreign-owned, compared to 35% in 2019 before trade restrictions escalated. The new park is part of a broader strategy to reverse this decline and recapture global design talent.
Comparative context: The Lingang park contrasts with two older IC design hubs in Shanghai:
- Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park: 2,000+ semiconductor firms but only 12% foreign-owned; limited space for new expansion
- Caohejing High-Tech Park: 1,200 firms, 20% foreign, but focused on mature nodes (90nm+) and legacy memory designs
The new park exclusively targets advanced node design (28nm and below), a segment where foreign firms still hold 65% of China’s market share despite export controls. The Chinese government expects this park to reduce China’s reliance on imported chip designs by 15% by 2030.
Key Implications for Foreign Semiconductor Firms
For foreign IC design houses, the Lingang park presents both opportunity and strategic caution.
Opportunities:
- Direct access to China’s fast-growing automotive and EV chip market (valued at 90 billion RMB in 2024, projected 150 billion RMB by 2027)
- Government-backed EDA tool access without individual licensing hassles with US vendors
- Co-location with SMIC’s advanced foundry lines in Lingang’s broader industrial zone (5km radius)
Challenges:
- US export controls on EDA tools for 7nm and below designs may still apply even within the park
- Talent availability: Shanghai faces a shortage of 50,000+ experienced analog and mixed-signal designers
- IP protection remains a concern — China’s trade secret enforcement rate for semiconductor IP stands at 42% compared to 70% in the US (2024 WIPO data)
Decision Framework for Foreign Firms
If your company focuses on advanced process nodes (7nm and below) with a dual-market strategy (China + export), the Lingang park offers direct access to dedicated EDA tools and foundry partnerships that can reduce design cycle time by 30%.
If your priority is proximity to mature manufacturing fabs and legacy talent pools for nodes 28nm+, consider establishing in Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park instead, where land costs are lower and the existing semiconductor ecosystem is denser.
Comparison: Shanghai’s IC Design Parks at a Glance
| Park Name | Location | Size (sqm) | Foreign Firms (Share) | Focus Nodes | Opened |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lingang IC Design Park | Lingang, Pudong | 300,000 | Target 40% | 28nm and below | 2025 |
| Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park | Zhangjiang, Pudong | 2,000,000 | 12% | All nodes including mature | 1992 |
| Caohejing High-Tech Park | Xuhui District | 1,500,000 | 20% | 90nm+ and memory | 2004 |
| Songjiang IC Base | Songjiang District | 500,000 | 15% | Analog, power management | 2018 |
Source: Shanghai Municipal Commission of Economy and Informatization, March 2025
3 Pitfalls to Watch When Entering the New Park
Next Steps for Your Company
- Assess eligibility: Determine if your target process node (28nm and below qualifies) and if your product market aligns with automotive, AI, or industrial ICs — the park’s three priority verticals. Use our quick eligibility checklist for the Lingang park.
- Secure your WFOE registration early: The park’s administrative committee has allocated only 30% of office space to foreign firms initially. First movers will get the most favorable rent subsidies. Start your WFOE registration for semiconductor firms.
- Protect your IC design IP before entering: China’s trade secret registration system (商业秘密备案, shāngyè mìmì bèi’àn) requires pre-filing of design schematics to enforce IP rights in local courts. Schedule an IP protection audit specific to IC design IP.
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