The move highlights Silanna’s customer-first strategy focused on stable pricing, faster availability, and supply reliability.
Silanna Semiconductor has announced a two-year price lock across its entire range of high-performance analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), positioning the move as a response to rising semiconductor costs and pricing volatility across the industry.
The initiative guarantees pricing for 24 months from the receipt of a customer purchase order, providing design teams and manufacturers with greater budgeting certainty during product development and production cycles. The company said the decision aims to reduce financial risk for customers at a time when several major semiconductor vendors have introduced significant price increases across analog and embedded product categories.
According to Silanna, stable component pricing helps manufacturers improve forecasting accuracy and avoid unexpected mid-cycle cost adjustments that can disrupt long-term programs.
A key factor enabling the pricing commitment is the company’s proprietary Plural™ architecture. Rather than developing individual chips for each product variation, Silanna builds multiple ADC models from a shared silicon platform. This approach allows faster product development, lowers engineering costs, and improves manufacturing efficiency while minimizing exposure to supply chain disruptions.
The architecture also supports scalability across the company’s growing ADC lineup, which currently spans hundreds of stock-keeping units covering 10-, 12-, 14-, and 16-bit performance ranges.
Silanna said the platform-based design strategy strengthens supply continuity while maintaining competitive performance levels compared with higher-priced alternatives in the market. By simplifying design and production processes, the company aims to offer customers reliable access to components even during periods of industry shortages.
The price-lock program reflects a broader effort by Silanna to differentiate itself through predictable pricing, faster availability, and customer-focused product development as semiconductor buyers increasingly prioritize supply stability alongside performance.


















