Nvidia generates the majority of its revenue from sales to U.S. tech companies. President Trump lifts ban on H200 processor sales to China but imposes a 25% revenue share to the U.S. government. No sign of reduced domestic sales in 2026 despite potential international growth for Nvidia.

Nvidia dominates the AI hardware market with a 90% share in AI accelerator chips. U.S. tech firms drive 69% of Nvidia’s revenue. Tariffs and trade conflicts pose challenges, but data center sales soar. Nvidia faces U.S. restrictions on chip exports to China impacting revenue.

Nvidia maintains strong demand for its processors in the U.S. in 2026. Data center sales surge, with a 66% increase year over year. The chipmaker’s robust growth continues despite uncertain trade policies. Potential for further growth if semiconductor trade restrictions are lifted.

Trump allows Nvidia to sell H200 chips in China, with a 25% revenue share to the U.S. 5% of Nvidia’s chip sales go to China, down from 25% in 2022. Uncertain impact on revenue diversification as Nvidia considers increasing H200 production for China. Potential revenue growth if demand for H200 rises.

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Read more at Nasdaq: Nvidia Earns 69% of Its Revenue From the U.S. Here’s How Tariffs Could Affect That in 2026.