
GIGABYTE has officially kicked off local motherboard production in India. This marks a significant milestone in its long-term commitment to the Indian PC market and the government’s ‘Make in India’ initiative. The brand also says India has become one of its most strategic markets globally, and this move will help it scale faster while improving availability and affordability for consumers.
GIGABYTE’s move to local motherboard manufacturing marks a major shift. Instead of relying on imports, the brand is now producing hardware within India. This should help reduce dependence on foreign supply chains, improve pricing and logistics, speed up product deliveries, and strengthen after-sales support. GIGABYTE also notes that local units will adhere to the same high-quality manufacturing standards the brand is known for worldwide.

PC hardware demand is rising across mainstream users, gamers, PC builders, and enterprise buyers. With local production, consumers can expect better availability of popular motherboard models, quicker service and logistics, and potentially more competitive pricing over time. It also opens newer supply-chain opportunities in government and enterprise sectors, where high-performance and locally manufactured tech is highly valued. Brand also mentions that Motherboards are just the start. They also confirm that Monitors and laptops are next in line for India-based manufacturing as part of its expanding ecosystem here.
The global RAM market is currently facing a sharp supply shortage, causing memory prices to surge across regions. This spike has started affecting PC builders and OEMs alike, leading to higher component costs and slower production timelines. By shifting motherboard production to India, brands like GIGABYTE aim to reduce logistical pressures that often worsen price volatility, maintain better stock levels even during global supply-chain disruptions, and cushion Indian buyers from sudden international component price spikes.
This may not directly control RAM supply itself, but it strengthens local resilience for the PC ecosystem by shortening supply routes and improving responsiveness, which is especially important when key parts like memory see unpredictable pricing or availability.







