Samsung opens world’s biggest smartphone factory in India

Yordan, 09 July 2018

The South Korean president Moon Jae-in is on an official visit in India. Part of the trip included the official opening of the biggest smartphone factory in the world, based in Noida, Uttar Pradesh. The plant spans 35 acres (141 thousand sq.m.) and aims to increase overall production of devices in India by 50%.

Samsung opens world’s biggest smartphone factory in India

The new factory is part of a $700 million expansion plan. It is on the set of a former plant that used to make refrigerators and TVs, with smartphones joining the production line in 2007. Before the launch of the Noida plant Samsung was manufacturing 67 million phones in India, mostly at its other base in Tamil Nadu, Southern India. The Korean giant wants the unit production to go as high as 120 million in three years and for that it is hiring 5,000 new employees.

Samsung India said in a press statement that the bigger manufacturing plant will respond to the growing demand for Samsung products across India. The company was the top smartphone company for a long time and is still fighting for the top spot with Xiaomi which also started manufacturing phones in the country.

Via


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Reader comments

I was talking about raw performance which is provided by the chipset. Xiaomi uses Qualcomm Chipsets like the rest of the world. And they launch their phones early with the latest chipset than the rest of the manufacturers e.g. Mi 8 SE with sdm710. Th...

Yep, I agree with low/mid-range specifications. Until 2017 refresh cycle, their mid range options (J5 & J7) were way better. They are currently stuck in Exynos 7870 chipset and very adamant to move away form this chipset. Even the current A8+ 201...

  • AnonD-728535
  • 12 Jul 2018
  • Kxb

I doubt you will hold the same opinion regarding Samsung's midranges or low-ends. If you happen to only use Samsung's flagships, then surely you will say that Samsung's phones are sweet. The main problem with Samsung's line-up is their rather subpar ...

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