PUBLISHER: QYResearch | PRODUCT CODE: 2013039
PUBLISHER: QYResearch | PRODUCT CODE: 2013039
Millimeter-wave Radar Sensor is evolving from a single automotive safety component into a cross-domain sensing platform. From a commercial perspective, the key differentiator is no longer basic detection capability alone, but the ability to convert RF performance into reliable, monetizable outputs such as range, velocity, angle, occupancy, presence, micro-motion, and trajectory under real operating conditions. As a result, competition is shifting away from isolated chip specifications toward broader platform capability, including transceivers, antenna packaging, software stacks, reference designs, safety workflows, and mass-production support.
The market has already entered a meaningful scale-up phase. In 2025, global Millimeter-wave Radar Sensor shipments reached 205,651.4 k pcs, revenue reached USD 2,689.78 million, and the average selling price was approximately USD 13.1 per pcs. Market concentration is rising at the value layer even faster than at the volume layer. The top five suppliers-Infineon, NXP, Texas Instruments, Calterah, and Asahi Kasei Microdevices (AKM)-accounted for 48.6% of global shipments and 54.1% of global revenue in 2025, indicating that premium value pools are increasingly controlled by suppliers with stronger platformization, qualification capability, and customer integration depth.
Frequency structure has become the clearest lens through which the industry should be read. In 2025, 76-81GHz Millimeter-wave Radar Sensor shipments reached 132,521.8 k pcs, accounting for 64.4% of total volume and 67.5% of total revenue, confirming its position as the dominant commercial platform for automotive exterior ADAS and higher-performance radar architectures. The 60GHz segment shipped 49,335.8 k pcs, representing 24.0% of volume, and its strategic role is larger than its present size suggests because it enables scalable deployment in cabin sensing, industrial automation, robotics, and smart-space sensing. By contrast, 24GHz shipped 18,220.6 k pcs, or 8.9% of total volume, and is increasingly associated with carry-over programs, lower-cost short-range use cases, and residual legacy demand.
Applications remain automotive-led, but the second growth curve is now clearly visible. Automotive exterior ADAS accounted for 107,226.6 k pcs in 2025, or 52.1% of total shipments, and 55.6% of total revenue, making it the principal foundation of the Millimeter-wave Radar Sensor business. However, cabin sensing reached 24,616.5 k pcs, industrial, infrastructure and robotics reached 39,300.0 k pcs, and consumer electronics and smart home reached 21,182.1 k pcs, together signaling that the market is broadening beyond vehicle safety hardware. In business terms, exterior ADAS secures baseline scale, cabin sensing lifts vehicle content value, and industrial plus smart-space applications determine whether Millimeter-wave Radar Sensor can become a broader sensing platform rather than remaining a narrow automotive component category.
Regional dynamics are forming a distinctly multi-center competitive map. In 2025, North America, Europe, China, and Japan recorded output of 49,160.4, 61,034.1, 46,326.1, and 26,027.8 k pcs respectively, making them the four principal anchors of the global Millimeter-wave Radar Sensor industry. Europe remains strong in high-end automotive electronics and system definition, North America benefits from deep semiconductor platform capability and industrial ecosystems, China leads in cost efficiency, iteration speed, local customer coverage, and manufacturing scale, while Japan retains advantages in reliability, low-power architectures, cabin applications, and module-oriented execution. The result is not a single unified global market, but a market with different regional centers shaping different parts of the value chain.
Supplier competition is moving from parameter leadership to platform leadership. Infineon, NXP, and Texas Instruments represent global platform-scale suppliers with broad customer reach across automotive and industrial markets. Asahi Kasei Microdevices (AKM), Socionext, and Acconeer are more differentiated in 60GHz, low-power sensing, and use-case-focused execution. China-based players including Calterah, Possumic Technology, AirTouch (Shanghai) Intelligent Technology, Iclegend Micro, SGR Semiconductors, and ifLabel are accelerating adoption across automotive, industrial, and smart-space scenarios. For industry specialists, the real question is no longer who has a short-term specification edge, but who can build a closed loop from RF front-end and SoC through antenna packaging, middleware, qualification, customer customization, and scalable mass-production support.
The global Millimeter-wave Radar Sensor market is segmented by company, region (country), by Type, and by Application. Players, stakeholders, and other participants in the global Millimeter-wave Radar Sensor market will be able to gain the upper hand as they use the report as a powerful resource. The segmental analysis focuses on sales, revenue and forecast by region (country), by Type and by Application for the period 2021-2032.
Market Segmentation
By Company
Segment by Type
Segment by Application
Major Region and Country
Chapter Outline
Chapter 1: Introduces the report scope of the report, executive summary of different market segments (by Type, and by Application, etc), including the market size of each market segment, future development potential, and so on. It offers a high-level view of the current state of the market and its likely evolution in the short to mid-term, and long term.
Chapter 2: Sales and revenue of Millimeter-wave Radar Sensor in global, regional level and country level. It provides a quantitative analysis of the market size and development potential of each region.
Chapter 3: Detailed analysis of Millimeter-wave Radar Sensor manufacturers competitive landscape, sales, revenue, price, market share and industry ranking, latest development plan, merger, and acquisition information, etc.
Chapter 4: Provides the analysis of various market segments by Type, covering the sales, revenue, price, and development potential of each market segment, to help readers find the blue ocean market in different market segments.
Chapter 5: Provides the analysis of various market segments by Application, covering the sales, revenue, price, and development potential of each market segment, to help readers find the blue ocean market in different downstream markets.
Chapter 6: Region anaylsis by company, by Type, by Application, sales, revenue, and price for each segment, and by customer
Chapter 7: Provides profiles of key manufacturers, introducing the basic situation of the main companies in the market in detail, including product descriptions and specifications, Millimeter-wave Radar Sensor revenue, gross margin, and recent development, etc.
Chapter 8: Analysis of industrial chain, including the upstream and downstream of the industry.
Chapter 9: Sales channels analysis
Chapter 10: Introduces the market dynamics, latest developments of the market, the driving factors and restrictive factors of the market, the challenges and risks faced by manufacturers in the industry, and the analysis of relevant policies in the industry.
Chapter 11: The main points and conclusions of the report.