Nvidia now requires full upfront payments from Chinese clients ordering its H200 chips, with no cancellation or refund options allowed. The U.S. chipmaker introduced the strict policy due to ongoing uncertainty around Chinese regulatory approval of the product. Customers must commit capital in advance, or in some cases offer insurance or assets as collateral, to secure orders.
According to Reuters, Nvidia implemented tougher terms for H200 chip purchases following delays in Beijing’s decision on shipment approvals. Two sources familiar with the matter said the policy includes no refunds or configuration changes after orders are placed. Previous sales terms allowed deposits instead of full payment, but the H200 orders now require full commitment at placement.
The chipmaker made these adjustments to protect itself from regulatory uncertainty and potential financial risk. In some cases, clients can use commercial insurance or assets instead of cash if Nvidia accepts the alternative. One person said the change reflects the unpredictable regulatory environment around advanced chip shipments in China.
Chinese tech companies have ordered over 2 million H200 chips, each priced around $27,000, exceeding Nvidia’s available inventory. However, as we had reported earlier, Beijing recently instructed some buyers to pause orders while regulators finalize domestic chip purchase requirements temporarily. Authorities are determining how many local chip companies must purchase alongside H200 units.
The Information previously reported the order pause as Chinese regulators continue to evaluate import procedures. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang confirmed strong demand, saying, “We fired up our supply chain to meet that demand.” He added that formal approval may not come, but orders indicate customers are allowed to proceed.
Nvidia plans to fulfill early Chinese orders using existing H200 stock, with shipments expected before mid-February’s Lunar New Year holiday. The company has also asked Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. to increase chip production to meet demand. New H200 manufacturing is scheduled to begin in Q2 2026.
The H200 delivers nearly six times the performance of the previously available H20 chip, which China has now banned. While Chinese firms like Huawei produce AI chips such as the Ascend 910C, Nvidia’s H200 still outperforms them in training advanced AI models. Nvidia faces production challenges as it transitions from Blackwell chips to next-generation Rubin designs.
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