Magnet Market Breakdown: From Mine to Motor-Where Value Actually Lives

Apr 2, 2026

Highlights

  • Rare earth magnets capture 35-40% of the $55-60B permanent magnet market by 2025, with China controlling 90-94% of global magnet production—the real bottleneck in electrification supply chains.
  • Sintered NdFeB magnets dominate EV motors and wind turbines with the highest energy density (35-52 MGOe), but require increasing dysprosium content for high-temperature stability.
  • Western magnet independence faces 10-15 year timelines for full mine-to-magnet chains, with current ex-China capacity orders of magnitude smaller than needed for competitive scale.

Permanent magnets are the force multipliers of electrification, converting rare earth chemistry into torque, motion, and control across EV motors, wind turbines, robotics, consumer electronics, and defense systems. By 2025, the rare earth magnet market (NdFeB + SmCo) is estimated at roughly $20–22 billion, while the broader permanent magnet market (including ferrite and AlNiCo) approaches $55–60 billion. This places rare earth magnets at approximately 35–40% of total market value, despite representing a minority of volume.

More importantly, magnets dominate the economics of magnet-critical rare earths (Nd, Pr, Dy, Tb)—capturing a disproportionate share of value due to performance requirements. REEx estimates and industry analyses consistently show magnets as the highest value-added step in the chain.

Magnet Classes—What Actually Powers the World

Sintered NdFeB (Workhorse)

  • Highest energy density (~35–52 MGOe typical commercial range)
  • Used in EV traction motors, wind turbines, and defense systems
  • ~90%+ of NdFeB magnets are sintered

Bonded NdFeB

  • Polymer-bound, moldable into complex shapes
  • Lower performance, high precision
  • Used in sensors, electronics, and micro-motors

Samarium-Cobalt (SmCo)

  • Exceptional thermal and corrosion stability
  • Critical for aerospace, defense, and extreme environments

Ferrite (Ceramic)

  • Lowest cost, no rare earths
  • Dominates volume in appliances and industrial motors

Engineering Constraint: Power vs Stability

The central technical challenge is balancing magnetic strength (remanence, energy density) with coercivity and thermal stability.

Higher-temperature NdFeB magnets typically require increasing dysprosium/terbium content, sometimes rising from <0.5% to ~8–10%+ in extreme grades. Advanced techniques like grain boundary diffusion are reducing—but not eliminating—this dependency.

SWOT Snapshot—By Magnet Class

ClassStrengthsWeaknessesOpportunitiesThreats
Sintered NdFeBHighest energy density (BHmax), critical for high-performance motorsDependence on heavy REEs (Dy, Tb) for high-temp use; corrosion; brittleEV drivetrains, wind turbines, robotics, aerospaceChina midstream dominance, pricing volatility, and substitution in some segments
Bonded NdFeBNet-shape manufacturing, design flexibility, lower waste, scalableLower magnetic strength vs. sintered; temperature limitsMiniaturization (sensors, electronics, automotive auxiliaries)Performance gap vs. sintered; competition from ferrite in cost-sensitive uses
SmCoExcellent high-temperature stability; corrosion resistance; no heavy REEsHigh cost; cobalt supply risk; lower max energy than NdFeBDefense, aerospace, oil & gas, high-reliability systemsCost disadvantage vs. NdFeB; cobalt ESG/supply concerns
FerriteLowest cost; abundant, no rare earth dependencyLow magnetic strength, larger size requiredMass electrification, appliances, low-cost motorsDisplacement in high-performance applications by NdFeB

The China Reality: The Choke Point Is Midstream

The most critical correction in public discourse: the bottleneck is not mining—it is magnets.

According to the International Energy Agency and aligned industry data:

  • ~60–70% of mining
  • ~85–90%+ of refining/separation
  • ~90–94% of magnet production

China’s dominance increases downstream, where value concentrates. In 2024 alone, China exported ~58,000 tonnes of magnets—enough to support millions of EVs and industrial systems.

Can Ex-China Magnet Makers Survive?

Yes—but not independently, and not quickly.

With only ~10% of refining capacity outside China, most Western magnet makers still rely on at least one China-linked step: feedstock, metals, alloys, tooling, or expertise.

Meanwhile:

  • Mine development: ~8+ years
  • Full mine-to-magnet chain: 10–15 years realistically
  • Western magnet capacity: orders of magnitude smaller than China

REEx view

The Trump-era expectation of rapid reshoring is structurally optimistic given technical and capital constraints. REEx anticipates execution delays of 2 to 3 years.

Bottom Line: Magnets Are the Real Battlefield

The West is not losing the rare earth race at the mine—it is losing it in materials science and manufacturing.

Until ex-China supply chains achieve:

  • Scale (10k–50k+ tons/year)
  • Cost competitiveness
  • Heavy REE independence or minimization  (how will West work around this chokepoint in the next 24 to 36 months)?

China remains the defining force.

REEx Insight

The next decade will not be decided by who owns the ore.

It will be decided by who can turn that ore into high-performance magnets—at scale, at cost, and without strategic dependencies. Likely, more state subsidies will be necessary: part of a comprehensive industrial policy.

For top ex-China magnet makers, see REEx Insights for access. These rankings are updated quarterly.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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Permanent magnet supply chain analysis: China controls 90%+ of production. Why midstream dominance-not mining-defines the rare earth battlefield. (read full article...)

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