Anaheim Convention Center

Academic & Research Pricing

We support universities, research labs, and independent researchers working at the frontier of analog and mixed‑signal design.

If you’re using our FPAA products for non‑commercial education or research, you may be eligible for preferred academic pricing.

Who This Program Is For

This program is intended for:

  • University students (undergraduate and graduate)
  • PhD candidates and post‑doctoral researchers
  • Faculty members and teaching staff
  • University‑affiliated research labs
  • Public or non‑profit research institutions

The program is designed specifically for learning, teaching, prototyping, and early‑stage research.

What You Receive

Approved applicants receive:

  • Automatic academic pricing when logged into their account
  • Discounted pricing on select FPAA chips and development boards
  • Continued access to documentation, reference designs, and technical resources

Pricing is applied automatically at checkout once your account is approved — no coupon codes required.

Eligible Use

Academic pricing applies to purchases used for:

  • Coursework and student projects
  • Laboratory instruction and teaching kits
  • Thesis, dissertation, and post‑doctoral research
  • Grant‑funded academic research
  • Early proof‑of‑concept experimentation

If your work later transitions to commercial development or production, we’re happy to help you move to standard or volume pricing.

How to Apply

  1. Create a customer account using your academic or institutional email address
  2. Complete the academic pricing application form
  3. Our team will review your request (typically within 1–2 business days)
  4. Once approved, academic pricing will be automatically applied when you log in

There’s no obligation to purchase.

Not Sure If You Qualify?

If you’re unsure whether your project or institution is eligible, we encourage you to apply anyway or reach out to us.

We regularly work with interdisciplinary labs, mixed academic–industry collaborations, and early‑stage research groups.