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U.S. Senate Introduces PCB Reshoring Bill: 25% Tax Credit for Domestic Manufacturing

Senate Bill S.4569 Targets PCB Industry Revival

The Printed Circuit Board Association of America (PCBAA) announced on May 25, 2026, the introduction of a bipartisan Senate bill focused on reshoring America's printed circuit board manufacturing capability. Senators Ruben Gallego (D-AZ) and Jim Justice (R-WV) introduced S.4569, the Protecting Circuit Boards and Substrates Act, which provides a 25% tax credit for the purchase or acquisition of American-made PCBs.

The legislation is a companion to H.R. 3597 in the House, which includes both the tax credit and a $3 billion grant program to directly support U.S. PCB manufacturers with capital expenditure and capacity expansion.

Three Decades of Decline

The numbers tell a stark story: over the past 30 years, the U.S. share of global PCB production has collapsed from 30% to just 4%. This offshoring accelerated in the 2000s as heavily subsidized Asian manufacturers — particularly in China, Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea — made domestic U.S. production economically noncompetitive.

"These two bills impact both national and economic security. Every semiconductor needs a PCB to function." — David Schild, Executive Director of PCBAA

The legislation follows the model of semiconductor industry policy (CHIPS Act) that successfully incentivized over $200 billion in private investment for U.S. fab construction. PCBAA argues that PCBs represent the next critical link in the electronics supply chain requiring similar intervention.

What the Bill Means for the Industry

For U.S. PCB Manufacturers

  • 25% tax credit on revenues from domestically manufactured PCBs
  • $3 billion in grants for facility upgrades, equipment, and expansion
  • Potential to attract private investment similar to CHIPS Act multiplier effect

For OEMs and Defense Primes

  • Reduced dependency on vulnerable trans-Pacific supply chains
  • Compliance pathway for ITAR and security-clearance projects requiring U.S.-origin PCBs
  • Potential cost equalization between domestic and offshore sources

For the Global Supply Chain

  • Signal that PCB manufacturing is joining semiconductors as strategic infrastructure
  • May prompt allied nations (EU, Japan, South Korea) to develop similar programs
  • Could accelerate high-complexity PCB technology development on U.S. soil

Defense and National Security Context

The bill's bipartisan sponsorship reflects growing concern about electronics supply chain vulnerabilities. Current U.S. defense systems rely heavily on Asian-manufactured PCBs — a dependency that the Department of Defense has flagged as a critical vulnerability.

The U.S. currently lacks domestic capability for the most advanced PCB technologies:

  • HDI microvias: Limited U.S. manufacturers capable of 3+N+3 structures
  • IC substrates: Zero domestic production of ABF substrate for advanced packaging
  • Ultra-high layer count: Few facilities capable of 40+ layer military-grade boards

The $3 billion grant program could fund equipment upgrades to close these capability gaps.

What This Means for PCB Buyers

For companies currently sourcing PCBs from Asia, the legislation creates several strategic considerations:

  1. Dual-sourcing: Qualifying domestic suppliers now may provide advantage when tax credits activate
  2. Lead time resilience: U.S. manufacturing eliminates 3-4 week shipping transit for urgent orders
  3. IP protection: Domestic manufacturing reduces exposure to technology transfer risks
  4. Compliance: Government and defense contracts increasingly require domestic origin documentation

Whether the bill passes in its current form or evolves through committee, the direction is clear: U.S. policy is moving toward incentivizing domestic PCB production.

Source: PCB Directory (May 25, 2026), PCBAA, Congress.gov


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