AMD, US0079031078

New launch window for AMD Spartan UltraScale+ SU200P FPGA

16.06.2026 - 05:50:33 | ad-hoc-news.de

AMD is preparing volume production of its Spartan UltraScale+ SU200P FPGA, a low-power, high-I/O device aimed at industrial, networking and embedded designs that need strong security and scalability without the cost of high-end FPGAs.

AMD, US0079031078
AMD, US0079031078

Edited by ad hoc news New Releases & Launches Desk. Reviewed before publication on 06/15/2026 at 10:45 PM ET. Details in the imprint.

AMD is pushing its FPGA portfolio further into embedded and industrial applications as the Spartan UltraScale+ SU200P FPGA moves into volume production in July 2026, giving hardware designers a larger, more capable part in the low-power Spartan family without stepping up to premium-priced devices. According to AMD, the SU200P is the biggest and most feature-rich Spartan UltraScale+ part to date, with high I/O density, 16 nm FinFET process technology and integrated security features aimed at long-lived systems. An AMD blog on the Spartan UltraScale+ family highlights that the SU200P is now entering production after an evaluation phase.

What the Spartan UltraScale+ SU200P brings to embedded and industrial designs

The Spartan UltraScale+ SU200P targets designers who need a mid-range FPGA for control, I/O expansion, bridging and sensor aggregation in markets such as industrial automation, healthcare equipment, test and measurement and communications infrastructure, where cost and power limits rule out larger Versal and Kintex devices. Built on AMD’s 16 nm FinFET process, the SU200P offers more logic and memory resources than other Spartan UltraScale+ parts, alongside support for up to hundreds of user I/O pins that can operate across roughly 1.0 V to 3.3 V ranges, enabling direct connection to a mix of legacy and modern interfaces without external level shifters, which can simplify board design and reduce bill-of-materials costs.

Beyond raw I/O count, AMD emphasizes hardened security blocks in the Spartan UltraScale+ line, including secure boot, bitstream encryption and authentication features that are increasingly required in connected industrial and medical systems that must resist tampering over long lifecycles. The SU200P leverages the same Spartan UltraScale+ tool flow via the Vivado Design Suite, so teams already prototyping on smaller Spartan devices can scale their designs to the larger SU200P with minimal changes, while retaining support for familiar IP blocks and design methodologies that have been established in earlier Xilinx-era Spartan generations. For engineering teams, that continuity can cut bring-up time and reduce project risk when migrating existing control or monitoring designs to the new part.

On the commercial side, AMD positions Spartan UltraScale+ as the low-power, cost-optimized entry point in its programmable logic stack, below Artix and Kintex products, but with enough capacity for complex state machines, soft processors and custom accelerators in edge systems. Distributors such as ASI list AMD’s embedded and FPGA families as central components for networking, security and storage platforms, underscoring how parts like the SU200P are meant to slot into wide, high-volume OEM designs rather than niche boards. Channel communications from partners that also promote AMD EPYC embedded processors show AMD’s broader strategy of pairing FPGAs and CPUs in complete platform offerings for industrial and communications customers. For buyers, this means the SU200P will be offered through AMD sales and authorized distributors as part of a larger ecosystem, not as a one-off specialty component.

Strategically, Spartan UltraScale+ extends AMD’s reach beyond its higher-profile data center GPUs and EPYC CPUs into the long-tail of embedded systems that require stable supply, long-term availability and conservative thermal envelopes. The company states that SU200P silicon can be ordered through AMD sales or authorized distributors, with the aim of providing a straightforward path from evaluation kits to mass production boards in sectors like factory automation, smart grid equipment and ruggedized communications hardware. While FPGAs are a relatively small slice of AMD’s overall revenue compared with data center compute, they broaden the company’s portfolio in markets where Intel and smaller FPGA vendors also compete for sockets. Shares of Advanced Micro Devices (ISIN US0079031078) traded on NASDAQ at $352.03 on 06/14/2026, according to market data summarized by Investing.com’s AMD overview, reflecting investor focus on its AI and data center lines alongside its embedded products.

AMD Spartan UltraScale+ SU200P FPGA key facts

  • Product: AMD Spartan UltraScale+ SU200P FPGA
  • Manufacturer: Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
  • Category: New Release/Launch (FPGA)
  • Launch date: Volume production slated for July 2026
  • MSRP / Price: Not publicly disclosed; available via AMD sales and distributors
  • Availability: Orderable through AMD sales and authorized distributors; global industrial and embedded markets
  • Target audience: Embedded, industrial, communications and networking system designers needing low-power, high-I/O programmable logic
  • Key differentiator / USP: Largest and most capable device in the Spartan UltraScale+ family, combining high I/O density, 16 nm FinFET efficiency and integrated security features for long-lived embedded systems

More on AMD’s programmable portfolio

Further company updates, including coverage of AMD’s FPGA roadmap and embedded strategy, can be found in the equity section and in the company’s own investor materials.

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This article was a.i.-assisted and editorially reviewed. Product information without warranty; prices and availability may change at short notice. Not investment advice and not a buy or sell recommendation. Trading involves risk up to and including the total loss of invested capital.

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