Key Market Trends and Insights
- North America dominated the Secure Boot And Firmware Security Market in 2025, accounting for approximately 39.1% of global revenue, driven by US federal zero-trust strategy mandates, the highest concentration of silicon and firmware security vendors, and systematic secured-core server and PC deployment requirements across defence and critical infrastructure procurement.
- By Component, Hardware leads with approximately 53.1% of 2024 revenue, reflecting the primacy of silicon-based roots of trust (TPM chips, secure enclaves, hardware security modules) as the foundation of firmware security architectures. Secure firmware update (OTA) frameworks are the fastest-growing software component at approximately 9.9% CAGR through 2030.
- Asia-Pacific is the fastest-growing regional market at approximately 10% CAGR through 2030, driven by China's pivot to indigenous processors creating new BIOS and TPM vendor ecosystems, Japan's government-funded industrial IoT security retrofit programmes, and South Korea and Taiwan's semiconductor manufacturers embedding security features in new processor designs.
Market Size & Forecast
- Market Size in 2025: USD 2.91 Billion
- Projected Market Size in 2035: USD 5.6 Billion
- CAGR from 2026-2035: 8.4%
- Hardware Revenue Share 2024: ~53.1%
The market's growth is structurally supported by three converging forces: regulatory mandates requiring hardware-anchored security for government and critical infrastructure devices; high-profile firmware attack incidents including SolarWinds (targeting network device firmware), BIOS bootkit deployments by nation-state actors, and the 2024 PKfail incident that exposed test signing key leakage across 900+ device models; and the explosion of IoT device deployment creating billions of new firmware security endpoints requiring secure boot, OTA update, and device attestation capabilities. Dell's PowerEdge secured-core servers, HP's Sure Start firmware protection, and Lenovo's ThinkShield suite represent the enterprise market's standard commercial implementations.
Key Takeaways
- The 2024 PKfail incident-exposing that test signing keys had been leaked and used in production UEFI Secure Boot implementations across 900+ device models-created urgent remediation demand and elevated enterprise awareness of firmware supply chain security vulnerabilities.
- Windows 11's mandatory TPM 2.0 and UEFI Secure Boot requirements have effectively standardised silicon-anchored boot security across all new consumer and enterprise PCs, creating the largest structural market expansion in firmware security history.
- OTA secure firmware update frameworks are the fastest-growing segment at approximately 9.9% CAGR, driven by IoT device fleet operators requiring cryptographically authenticated firmware updates for billions of deployed devices across automotive, industrial, and consumer categories.
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned
- Phoenix Technologies (United States)
- Insyde Software (Taiwan)
- Intel (United States)
- ARM (United Kingdom)
- Microsoft Corporation (United States)
- Apple Inc. (United States)
- Lenovo (China)
- HPE (United States)
- Dell Technologies (United States)

