๐ UPDATE โ June 4, 2026
Elon Musk has directly addressed criticism of the Grimes County tax exemption deal, arguing that the arrangement will ultimately benefit the county far more than the forgone property taxes. Musk stated: "Taking into account taxes paid by SpaceX employees and contractors, Terafab will far exceed all revenue that Grimes County currently earns." This suggests SpaceX is framing the exemption not as a giveaway, but as a net fiscal positive driven by the influx of high-earning workers and supply chain activity tied to the facility. The comment adds important context to the $119B project's local economic calculus, though independent revenue projections have not yet been publicly released to verify the claim.
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Via @SawyerMerritt ยท June 4, 2026
SpaceX secured a landmark tax abatement from Grimes County, Texas on June 3, 2026, clearing a critical hurdle for Terafab โ a massive semiconductor manufacturing facility that will produce chips for Starlink satellites, Tesla vehicles, and xAI's orbital data centers. The deal represents one of the largest industrial investments ever committed to rural Texas, with total capital outlays potentially reaching $119 billion.

What Grimes County Actually Approved
The Grimes County Commissioners Court voted to grant SpaceX a full exemption on property taxes tied to the Terafab project. In exchange, SpaceX and its partners will pay $10 million upfront to the county, followed by $20 million annually for 35 years โ a structured payment that gives the county predictable long-term revenue while SpaceX avoids the open-ended property tax exposure that would otherwise accompany a facility of this scale.
The site sits near the Gibbons Creek Reservoir in northwest Grimes County, roughly 90 miles northeast of Austin and 20 miles east of Bryan-College Station. A company affiliated with xAI โ Wit Tech LLC โ has already acquired over 6,000 acres in the area, suggesting land assembly is well underway.
The Scale of the Investment
Terafab at a Glance
| Initial Capital Investment | $55 billion |
| Total Potential Investment | Up to $119 billion |
| Jobs Created | 1,800 |
| Tax Abatement Term | 35 years |
| Upfront County Payment | $10 million |
| Annual County Payment | $20 million / year |
| Land Acquired | 6,000+ acres |
Those numbers place Terafab in the same conversation as TSMC's Arizona expansion and Intel's Ohio fab โ projects that reshaped regional economies for decades. For a county of roughly 30,000 residents, $20 million in guaranteed annual payments is a transformative revenue stream regardless of how the broader project scales.
Why This Matters for Tesla Owners
Terafab is not a SpaceX-only project. It is structured as a joint venture between SpaceX, Tesla, and xAI โ and the chips it produces are explicitly intended to supply Tesla's electric vehicles and Optimus humanoid robots alongside Starlink satellites and xAI's planned orbital data centers. According to reports, Elon Musk has indicated Tesla plans to utilize Intel's forthcoming 14A process node for chip production at the facility.
For Tesla owners, the practical implication is vertical integration at a scale the company has never attempted in silicon. Tesla already designs its own AI training chips (Dojo) and inference hardware (the FSD computer), but it has historically relied on third-party foundries for fabrication. A captive fab shared across SpaceX, Tesla, and xAI could eventually give the combined entity more control over chip supply, cost, and roadmap timing โ directly influencing how quickly FSD and Optimus hardware generations turn over.
The 35-year abatement horizon signals that all parties view this as generational infrastructure, not a short-cycle manufacturing bet. Whether Terafab delivers on its full $119 billion potential will depend on execution timelines that haven't been publicly committed to yet โ but the county vote removes one of the earliest regulatory gatekeepers from the path. The next milestones to watch are permitting, groundbreaking dates, and any formal announcement of the Intel 14A partnership.

Sarah focuses on Tesla Energy, SpaceX missions, and the broader Musk AI portfolio. Former data analyst in clean energy. Based in San Francisco.
Sources verified at publish time. Spotted an inaccuracy? Email editorial@basenor.com.







