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Apple is bringing Mac mini production home

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Mac mini M4 pictured from above, with various things plugged into the back.
Made in US Mac mini coming soon!
Photo: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac

Apple will start assembling Mac mini in the United States from later this year. Foxconn will assemble the computer at its facility in Houston, Texas.

The assembled units will primarily serve local demand.

Made in US Mac mini coming later in 2026

Apple mainly assembles its products, including iPhones and Macs, in China, India, Vietnam and Malaysia. Mac minis are primarily assembled in Vietnam and China. 

Despite the United States being one of Apple’s largest markets, the company has historically avoided large-scale domestic assembly due to higher labor and operational costs.

Apple COO Sabih Khan confirmed plans to assemble the Mac mini in the US in an interview with The Wall Street Journal. The move is a part of Apple’s commitment to invest up to $600 billion in the US by 2029. 

As part of this, the company has also promised to make 100% of iPhones and Apple Watch cover glass in the US. Corning is making the world’s largest smartphone glass production line at its Harrodsburg facility to achieve this.

Not a full-scale manufacturing effort

Local production of the Mac mini won’t dramatically alter Apple’s global supply chain footprint, but it does signal a continued effort to diversify manufacturing and reduce overreliance on a single region. That said, the Mac mini remains a relatively niche product within Apple’s Mac lineup. It accounts for a smaller share of overall shipments compared to the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro.

This will not be Apple’s first attempt at US-based production. It previously assembled the Mac Pro in Austin, Texas, in 2019, though that effort remained relatively limited in scale. The upcoming Mac mini assembly appears to follow a similar model, focusing on select configurations rather than a full manufacturing shift. 

The move should help Apple offset tariff pressures, which could, in turn, ease the impact of higher labor and operational costs tied to US-based assembly.

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