Tata Elxsi and Synopsys have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to collaborate on virtual electronic control unit (vECU) solutions for the automotive industry. The agreement was formalized at the SNUG India 2025 event in Bengaluru on July 11, 2025.
The partnership combines Tata Elxsi's engineering capabilities in embedded systems with Synopsys' virtualization technology platform. The collaboration aims to help automotive manufacturers and suppliers reduce development costs, improve software quality, and accelerate production timelines through pre-verified, integrated solutions.
Virtual ECUs represent a shift from traditional hardware-dependent testing methods to software-based simulation environments. These systems allow automotive engineers to test and validate software components without requiring physical prototypes, reducing both time and costs in the development process.
The companies are currently working with multiple global customers to deploy vECU solutions across various vehicle systems, including powertrain, chassis, body control, gateway, and central compute functions. These applications support software bring-up, board support package integration, and early-stage software validation processes.
Synopsys' virtualization solutions currently serve more than 50 global automotive original equipment manufacturers and Tier 1 suppliers. The technology enables companies to simulate real-world scenarios and validate software systems before physical implementation.
The automotive industry continues to transition toward software-defined vehicles, where software functionality increasingly determines vehicle capabilities and features. This shift requires new development methodologies and tools to manage the complexity of modern automotive systems.
Tata Elxsi operates as a global design and technology services provider across multiple industries, including automotive, broadcast, communications, healthcare, and transportation. The company employs over 13,000 engineers and specialists across its worldwide network of design studios and development centers.
The partnership also includes plans to explore opportunities for scaling electronics digital twins for multi-ECU and application-specific systems. Digital twins create virtual replicas of physical systems that can be used for testing, analysis, and optimization throughout the development lifecycle.
Both companies indicated that the collaboration responds to changing industry demands as automotive manufacturers move away from traditional development workflows toward more integrated approaches that combine engineering services with virtualization tools.