Global Power Management Integrated Circuit (PMIC) Market Trends and Insights
Rapid EV And xEV Penetration Elevating Demand For High-Current, High-Efficiency PMICs
Electric-vehicle sales surpassed 14 million units in 2025, with China accounting for 60% of volume and Europe contributing 25%, lifting battery-management silicon content per car from USD 450 in 2024 to USD 620 in 2025. The migration from 400-volt to 800-volt platforms in models such as the Kia EV6 reduces charging time below 18 minutes and cuts harness weight by 30%, but it also necessitates silicon-carbide DC-DC converters switching above 100 kHz at junction temperatures exceeding 175 °C. European Union rules mandating 48-volt mild hybrids in vehicles above 1,800 kg add bidirectional buck-boost PMIC demand, while on-board chargers now integrate 96%-efficient power-factor-correction stages to meet CISPR 25 limits. Battery second-life applications create a USD 1.2 billion aftermarket for PMICs that recalibrate state-of-health algorithms across -40 °C to +85 °C temperature ranges. Collectively, these forces accelerate revenue in the Power management integrated circuit (PMIC) market.Shrinking Process Nodes Enabling Higher On-Chip Power Density
TSMC began 2-nanometer production with backside power-delivery networks that double current density versus 5-nanometer, letting on-die regulators source 50 A/mm² for artificial-intelligence accelerators. Intel’s 18A node merges PowerVia interconnect with RibbonFET, allowing mixed linear and switched-mode blocks on a 4 mm² die and shrinking board area 40%. Samsung’s 3-nanometer gate-all-around process isolates voltage islands to improve power-supply rejection above 80 dB, and advanced fan-out packaging stacks PMIC dice beside wide-bandgap power stages for density of 1,200 W/in³. EUV adoption cut mask layers for analog blocks from 28 to 22, trimming non-recurring costs 15% and reducing design cycles to 14 months. These advances underpin long-term expansion of the Power management integrated circuit (PMIC) market.Supply-Chain Cyclicality Of Foundry Capacity For Analog And Mixed-Signal Nodes
Utilization at 180-nm and 130-nm lines dipped from 92% in Q1 2025 to 78% in Q3 before rebounding, stretching lead times to 22 weeks at GlobalFoundries and raising wafer premiums 10% at TSMC. Concentration in Taiwan and Singapore exposes the chain to natural-disaster and geopolitical risk, prompting the U.S. CHIPS Act to earmark USD 2 billion for domestic analog fabs, though first production is unlikely before 2028. Smaller OEMs that cannot lock capacity have shifted to catalog PMICs, trading 15% board-area efficiency for supply assurance and avoiding USD 3 million to USD 5 million in NRE. These dynamics cap near-term upside for the Power management integrated circuit (PMIC) market.Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
- Government Energy-Efficiency Mandates For Consumer And Industrial Electronics
- Edge-AI And IoT Proliferation Requiring Ultra-Low-Quiescent-Current PMICs
- Rising Design Complexity Driving NRE Costs Beyond Reach Of Smaller OEMs
Segment Analysis
Battery Management ICs held 33.96% of 2025 revenue and anchor expansion as electric-vehicle production and stationary storage scale rapidly. The segment’s Power management integrated circuit market size advantage derives from sub-10 mV cell-balancing accuracy and < 2% state-of-charge error that extend lithium-ion pack life.DC-DC converter PMICs benefit from distributed power architectures in servers and telecom equipment that cut copper loss 15%, while linear regulators remain indispensable for noise-sensitive RF chains despite thermal limits. Voltage-reference supervisors safeguard medical electronics with 5 ppm/°C drift, and motor-driver PMICs now manage 20 kHz field-oriented control in collaborative robots. Wireless-charging PMICs reached 15 W transfer in 2025 and are on a roadmap to 50 W for laptops, though 85% peak efficiency is the current ceiling. Together, these categories underpin balanced growth across the Power management integrated circuit (PMIC) market.
Consumer electronics retained a 41.23% share in 2025 as 2.1 billion smartphones, tablets, and wearables shipped, each embedding multiple regulators for displays, cameras, and audio paths. In contrast, automotive and e-Mobility posted a 9.37% CAGR, adding high-voltage battery management, on-board charging, and inverter gate drivers that raise silicon content to USD 850 by 2031.
Industrial automation and robotics require -40 °C to +105 °C ratings and 1-million-hour MTBF, while telecom infrastructure employs 200-A multi-phase buck converters running at >92% efficiency. Medical devices demand 4 kV isolation and < 10 µA leakage for patient safety, and IoT sensors tailor ultra-low-quiescent PMICs that extend coin-cell life to 12 years. These varied requirements reinforce diversification within the Power management integrated circuit (PMIC) market.
Complete Report Scope:
- By IC Type
- Linear Regulator PMIC
- DC-DC Converter PMIC
- Battery Management IC
- Voltage Reference and Supervisor IC
- Motor-Control and Driver PMIC
- Wireless-Charging PMIC
- By Application
- Consumer Electronics
- Automotive and e-Mobility
- Industrial and Robotics
- Telecommunications and Networking
- Healthcare and Medical Devices
- IoT and Edge Devices
- By Wafer Node
- ?65 nm
- 40 - 65 nm
- 20 - 40 nm
- < 20 nm
- By Power Range
- Low Power PMICs
- Medium Power PMICs
- High Power PMICs
- By Geography
- North America
- United States
- Canada
- Mexico
- South America
- Brazil
- Argentina
- Rest of South America
- Europe
- Germany
- United Kingdom
- France
- Italy
- Spain
- Rest of Europe
- Asia-Pacific
- China
- India
- Japan
- South Korea
- Australia and New Zealand
- Rest of Asia-Pacific
- Middle East
- Saudi Arabia
- United Arab Emirates
- Turkey
- Rest of Middle East
- Africa
- South Africa
- Nigeria
- Egypt
- Rest of Africa
- North America
Geography Analysis
Asia-Pacific accounted for 44.23% of global 2025 revenue, buoyed by China’s USD 150 billion self-sufficiency push, Japan’s zero-ppm automotive qualification, and Taiwan’s foundry leadership from 180 nm to 2 nm. China’s nine-million-unit EV output lifted local PMIC suppliers such as BYD Semiconductor to 35% domestic share by offering 20% lower cost solutions. Japan’s Renesas and Rohm leverage decades of Toyota collaboration to maintain AEC-Q100 supremacy, while South Korea’s capacitor-in-package innovations shrink smartphone boards 25%. The region remains the fulcrum of the Power management integrated circuit (PMIC) market.The Middle East is the fastest-growing region at an 8.12% CAGR, catalyzed by a USD 6.4 billion Saudi fab and an Abu Dhabi partnership with GlobalFoundries that targets automotive and industrial PMICs from 2027. North America benefits from the CHIPS Act, with Texas Instruments’ four new 300-mm lines adding 40,000 wafers per month of analog capacity by 2028. European electrification mandates are driving demand for battery management and 48-V mild-hybrid devices, with Infineon and STMicroelectronics adding capacity in Germany and Italy.
South America’s Manaus and Tierra del Fuego clusters localize catalog PMICs for white goods despite tariffs up to 35%, while Africa’s USD 200 million market centers on off-grid solar chargers that require ultra-low-power PMICs. Collectively, these dynamics shape regional trajectories in the Power management integrated circuit (PMIC) market.
List of Companies Covered in this Report:
- Texas Instruments Inc.
- Analog Devices, Inc.
- Infineon Technologies AG
- NXP Semiconductors N.V.
- STMicroelectronics N.V.
- ON Semiconductor Corporation
- Renesas Electronics Corporation
- Qualcomm Incorporated
- Broadcom Inc.
- Skyworks Solutions, Inc.
- Dialog Semiconductor (Renesas)
- Rohm Co., Ltd.
- Maxim Integrated (ADI)
- Toshiba Electronic Devices and Storage Corp.
- MediaTek Inc.
- Power Integrations, Inc.
- Silicon Laboratories Inc.
- Monolithic Power Systems, Inc.
- Vishay Intertechnology, Inc.
- Littelfuse, Inc.
Additional Benefits:
- The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
- 3 months of analyst support
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Texas Instruments Inc.
- Analog Devices, Inc.
- Infineon Technologies AG
- NXP Semiconductors N.V.
- STMicroelectronics N.V.
- ON Semiconductor Corporation
- Renesas Electronics Corporation
- Qualcomm Incorporated
- Broadcom Inc.
- Skyworks Solutions, Inc.
- Dialog Semiconductor (Renesas)
- Rohm Co., Ltd.
- Maxim Integrated (ADI)
- Toshiba Electronic Devices and Storage Corp.
- MediaTek Inc.
- Power Integrations, Inc.
- Silicon Laboratories Inc.
- Monolithic Power Systems, Inc.
- Vishay Intertechnology, Inc.
- Littelfuse, Inc.

