S3374-119

In Committee

SAFE Chips Act of 2025

119th Congress Introduced Dec 4, 2025

Analysis under review: This bill has generated analysis that may be too generic or incomplete. Clause-level evidence remains available below.

Summary

What This Bill Does

This bill tightens export controls on advanced integrated circuits by requiring and denying licenses for covered transfers to foreign adversaries and adversary-linked entities.

Who Benefits and How

United States national-security interests could benefit from stricter limits on advanced-chip transfers to foreign adversary countries and adversary-linked firms.

Who Bears the Burden and How

Advanced-chip exporters would face stricter sales restrictions, and Commerce Department officials would need to administer the new controls, technical updates, and congressional briefings.

Key Provisions

  • Requires a license for certain exports, reexports, and in-country transfers of advanced integrated circuits to foreign adversary destinations or adversary-linked entities and requires denial of those license applications.
  • Defines advanced integrated circuits, exempts products not designed or marketed for data centers, and includes Hong Kong and Macau within the foreign-adversary definition.
  • Allows later technical-parameter updates subject to End-User Review Committee approval and requires advance congressional briefing before those updates are published.

Evidence Chain:

This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers.

At a Glance

What This Bill Does

This bill tightens export controls on advanced integrated circuits by requiring and denying licenses for covered transfers to foreign adversaries and adversary-linked entities.

Key Policy Areas

Technology, Trade, National Security

Primary Purpose

This bill tightens export controls on advanced integrated circuits by requiring and denying licenses for covered transfers to foreign adversaries and adversary-linked entities.

Policy Domains

Technology Trade National Security

Main Provisions

Identified Gains
Contextual inference, no direct clause citation
  • United States national-security interests seeking tighter controls on advanced-chip transfers to foreign adversaries
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: is

Contextual inference, no direct clause citation

Identified Costs
Contextual inference, no direct clause citation
  • Advanced-chip exporters and Commerce officials subject to stricter licensing, denial, and update procedures
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: is

Contextual inference, no direct clause citation

Legislative Progress

In Committee
Introduced Committee Passed
Dec 4, 2025

Mr. Ricketts (for himself, Mr. Coons, Mr. Cotton, Mrs. Shaheen, …

Dec 4, 2025

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, …

Dec 4, 2025

Introduced in Senate

Stakeholder Effects

cui bono?

How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.

Technology
4 mentions across 2 clauses
-4 negative

Foreign adversary countries and adversary-linked entities denied access to covered advanced chips, United States exporters of advanced integrated circuits facing tighter restrictions on foreign sales and transfers

Government
2 mentions across 2 clauses
-2 negative

Commerce Department officials administering license denials, definition updates, and congressional briefings

3/3
sections analyzed
Full impact breakdown

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Technology Trade National Security
Actor Mappings
"the_secretary"
→ Secretary of Commerce

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology