
The US will allow Nvidia’s H200 processors, its second-best artificial intelligence chips, to be exported to China and collect a 25% fee on such sales, US President Donald Trump said on Monday.
The decision appears to settle a US debate about whether Nvidia and rivals should maintain their global lead in AI chips by selling to China or withhold the exports, though Beijing has told companies not to use US technology, leaving it unclear whether Trump’s decision would lead to new sales.
Nvidia shares rose 2% in after-hours trading after Trump made the announcement on Truth Social, following a 3% rise during the day on a report by Semafor.
Trump said in his post that he had informed President Xi Jinping of China, where Nvidia’s chips are under government scrutiny, about the move and that he “responded positively”.
He said the US commerce department was finalising details of the arrangement and the same approach would apply to other AI chip firms such as Advanced Micro Devices and Intel.
Trump’s post said the fee to be paid to the US government was “$25%”, and a White House official confirmed he meant 25%, higher than the 15% proposed in August.
“We will protect national security, create American jobs, and keep America’s lead in AI,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “Nvidia’s US customers are already moving forward with their incredible, highly advanced Blackwell chips, and soon, Rubin, neither of which are part of this deal.”
Compromise
Trump did not say how many H200 chips would be authorised for shipment or what conditions might apply, only that exports would occur “under conditions that allow for continued strong national security”.
Administration officials consider the move a compromise between sending Nvidia’s latest Blackwell chips to China, which Trump has declined to allow, and sending China no US chips at all, which officials believe would bolster Huawei’s efforts to sell AI chips in China, a person familiar with the matter said.
“Offering H200 to approved commercial customers, vetted by the department of commerce, strikes a thoughtful balance that is great for America,” Nvidia said in a statement.
Read: Under fire, Nvidia goes to war with its critics
Intel declined to comment. The US commerce department, which oversees export controls, and AMD did not respond to requests for comment.
A White House official said that the 25% fee would be collected as an import tax from Taiwan, where the chips are made, to the United States, where the chips will undergo a security review by US officials before being exported to China.

China hawks in Washington are concerned that selling more advanced AI chips to China could help Beijing supercharge its military, fears that had first prompted limits on such exports by the Biden administration.
The Trump administration had been considering greenlighting the sale, sources told Reuters last month. Trump said last week he met with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and that the executive was aware of where he stood on export controls.
“It’s a terrible mistake to trade off national security for advantages in trade,” said Eric Hirschhorn, who was a senior commerce department official during the Obama administration. “It cuts against the consistent policies of Democratic and Republican administrations alike not to assist China’s military modernisation.”
According to a report released on Sunday by the non-partisan think tank, the Institute for Progress (IFP), the H200 would be almost six times as powerful as the H20, the most advanced AI semiconductor that can legally be exported to China, after the Trump administration reversed its short-lived ban on such sales this year.
The Blackwell chip now in use by US AI firms is about 1.5 times faster than H200 chips for training AI systems, the IFP said, and five times faster for inferencing work where AI models are put to use. Nvidia’s own research has suggested Blackwell chips are 10 times faster than H200 chips for some tasks.
Several Democratic US senators in a statement described Trump’s decision as a “colossal economic and national security failure” that would be a boon to China’s industry and military.
‘No illusions’
Republican representative John Moolenaar, who chairs the house China select committee, said in a statement to Reuters that China would use the chips to strengthen its military capabilities and surveillance.
“Nvidia should be under no illusions – China will rip off its technology, mass-produce it themselves and seek to end Nvidia as a competitor,” he said.
The approval, however, comes as China is strengthening its resolve to wean the country off its reliance on Nvidia’s chips. China’s cyberspace regulator in July also accused Nvidia’s H20 chips of potentially carrying backdoor security risks, an allegation Nvidia has denied.
Read: Nvidia’s AI empire rests on just four customers
In recent months, Beijing has cautioned Chinese tech companies against buying chips that Nvidia downgraded to sell to the Chinese market, which are the H20, RTX 6000D and L20, two sources said.
“Chinese firms want H200s, but the Chinese state is driven by paranoia and pride,” said Craig Singleton, a senior fellow at the Washington think-tank Foundation for Defense of Democracies. “Washington may approve the chips, but Beijing still has to let them in.”

The H200 change of stance comes the same day that Trump’s justice department announced it had cracked a China-linked chip smuggling ring that in late 2024 and early 2025 exported and attempted to export at least US$160-million worth of controlled Nvidia H100 and H200 chips.
Chris McGuire, an expert on technology and national security who served at the US state department until this summer, said Chinese firms would likely still buy H200s, given that the chip “is better than every chip the Chinese can make”.
Read: Nvidia makes history as world’s first $5-trillion company
China’s domestic AI chip companies now include tech giant Huawei Technologies, which in September released a three-year product roadmap, as well as smaller players such as Cambricon and Moore Threads.
China’s SSE STAR Chip Index and the CSI Semiconductor Industry Index both dropped more than 1% at market open on Tuesday but soon recovered most of the losses. — Stephen Nellis, Karen Freifeld and Michael Martina, (c) 2025 Reuters
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