
Memory chip price surge forces consumer electronics cost hikes and product delays
A sharp rise in DRAM and NAND memory prices, driven by AI demand and constrained supply, is pushing up laptop, console and smartphone prices and prompting at least one brand to cancel a new phone launch.
Global memory chip prices have climbed 20 to 40 percent in recent months, with DRAM up roughly 30 percent and NAND flash up to 25 percent, according to industry analysts. The immediate effect is a wave of price increases across consumer electronics: laptop prices have risen 5 to 10 percent in North American and European markets, while the cost of memory in some professional and gaming models has added $80 to $120 to the final price. Console manufacturers face a 25 percent increase in GDDR memory costs, and analysts in the US project a possible 10 to 15 percent rise in console retail prices later this year.
The price surge stems from a collision of explosive demand and constrained supply. Large language models and cloud processing systems have doubled memory consumption in some data centres over the past year, while memory fabrication plants reduced investment during a prior market downturn and now require 12 to 18 months to expand capacity. A further factor, noted by financial media, is that artificial intelligence firms have pre-purchased a significant share of global memory output, squeezing availability for consumer device makers.
Apple’s chief executive Tim Cook told the Wall Street Journal that rising chip costs make price increases “unavoidable” and that the situation has become “uncontrollable,” though he did not specify timing or which products would be affected. The company had already raised the price of its entry-level Mac Mini the previous month. In the budget smartphone segment, the impact is starker: Nothing’s sub-brand CMF confirmed it will not launch a new phone this year because elevated memory costs prevent it from delivering a meaningful upgrade at an affordable price. Nothing’s CEO Carl Pei noted that memory now accounts for more than half of a smartphone’s total hardware cost, surpassing processors and displays.
Viewed from Cupertino, the pricing pressure coincides with a leadership transition that carries its own strategic weight. John Ternus, who becomes Apple’s CEO on 1 September 2026, has signalled a renewed emphasis on design cohesion, aiming to restore a unified aesthetic across hardware, software and packaging that analysts say has fragmented in recent years. Ternus’s background in hardware engineering is seen as an asset for that task, but the cost environment will constrain the margin for ambitious design overhauls, particularly as the company prepares for an AI-driven interface shift and a major iPhone redesign expected in 2027.
The next factual milestone is the memory supply response: fabrication plants indicate that meaningful capacity additions are 12 to 18 months away, meaning tight supply and elevated prices are likely to persist through at least the first half of 2026. Consumer advice circulating in Asian and Western markets suggests that buyers intending to purchase laptops or consoles should not delay, as further price increases are anticipated, especially for higher-memory configurations.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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Apple's leadership has cautioned that surging memory chip costs will make price hikes for iPhones and other devices unavoidable. The company is trying to cushion the impact, but the market situation has become unmanageable. Consumers should brace for increases, though no timeline or specific products have been named.
Global digital markets are reeling from a chip crisis that has driven memory prices up by 20 to 40 percent. Laptops, gaming consoles, smartphones, and storage devices are all facing sharp price hikes. What began as a warning in economic media has now become a serious worry for consumers everywhere.
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