Smartphones, Laptops To Get More Expensive As AI's Latest Victims
AI's latest side effect? More expensive smartphones, laptops and gaming consoles like PlayStation. Read on to know what's driving up these gadget prices.
Haven't you found yourself complaining about how expensive phones are getting? Well, I have. And I am afraid there's more bad news. Phones are set to get more expensive. In fact, not just phones, any gadget that uses memory chips - so laptops, tabs, gaming consoles like PlayStation, Nintendo etc.
Now, AI has been getting a lot of hate across the world for being directly linked to job losses, polluting the environment and for sparking anxieties around humanity's future in general. It's not exactly winning popularity contests despite promises to cure "all diseases." And this latest development may nosedive its popularity further. Your next phone, laptop or PS5 are set to get more expensive thanks to artificial intelligence taking on a new villain role.
Everybody's Craving Chips
The explosion of AI has resulted in a massive shortage of memory and storage chips, which in turn has skyrocketed their prices. These are the same chips that are used in phones, laptops and gaming consoles. These memory chips are used to transfer data and store information on devices. AI companies use them to help train and run large language models (LLMs), coding agents and other tools and have been gobbling them up.
The memory-chip market is dominated by three companies: South Korea's SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics and US-based Micron. While the valuations of these companies soar, the consumers are getting the short end of the stick.
Apple CEO Tim Cook recently warned customers that the next Mac, iPhone, or iPad could be more expensive due to rising memory and storage chips costs. Cook told WSJ last week that price increases are "unavoidable," despite Apple's efforts to absorb chip costs that have risen 4x since last year. He called the situation "unsustainable." Micron's contract prices for one of the most common data-center memory chips rose from $350 to $1,300 in a year, according to Circular Technology, a data-center hardware reseller.
"This unprecedented equilibrium disruption between demand and supply of memories, which contribute 8-12% of the BoM (Bill of Materials) of present-day smartphones, is leaving no option but to go for waves of increase in retail or operating price," according to Techarc, a market research and consulting firm
In fact, smartphone prices have been soaring since November 2025 with some model prices having nearly doubled, per analysts. What's perhaps kept Apple insulated so far is the forward looking contracts with suppliers with a predetermined price for a locked-in period. "Apple and few more T1 (Tier 1) brands across electronics have such contracts which insulate any such price hikes, of course they too have an expiry," Faisal Kawoosa, Chief Analyst and Founder, Techarc told NDTV.
Also read: Apple Executive Says Some Firms Are Building AI Without Regard For Humans
Prices To Soar Further
Analysts believe prices will progressively shoot up over the next couple years as shortages continue. Memory-chip makers are pumping in billions of dollars to add capacity and increase production, but these facilities usually take two to three years to build. Till then AI companies and gadget makers have no other option but to pay up whatever the memory-chip makers demand. And it's a no-brainer that the pain gets passed on to you, the end consumer.
For Indian consumers the pain may be compounded by the fact that the rupee continues to be under significant pressure. "For India, the situation only compounds further as the rupee versus dollar exchange rate equation is not stabilising. In recent years, the rupee is persistently devaluing against the US dollar by around 5% each year," according to Techarc. Since these chips are dollar purchases, it means the Indian consumer feels the pinch even more owing to the rupee's devaluation.
Independent consumer tech journalist, Prakhar Khanna told NDTV: "Companies like Oppo and Vivo are launching new phones at higher prices already. Vivo launched the X300 FE at the same price as Vivo X300 and I can't see the latter anywhere online, so they replaced their small flagship with a slightly lower-specced model for the same price."
Khanna also expects Samsung's upcoming foldables to be more expensive than last year's models.
A joint report by Trakin Tech and Techarc, released last month showed 48% consumers would postpone their smartphone purchase until prices settle and 6% would opt for second-hand devices.
-
Opinion | The Invisible Import In Every Indian Thali
In 2025-26, India spent over US$ 19 billion on edible oil imports to meet 60% of its demand, making it vulnerable to global price shocks and supply disruption while straining the nation's exchequer of its forex reserves for what it could grow at home
-
After Sex, Drugs, Alcohol Rehab, Now There's De-Addiction For AI
AI addiction and dependence is reportedly on the rise. There are now support groups similar to Alcoholics Anonymous that can help those in need recover.
-
Opinion | Pune Fort Murder, And The One Word That Could've Stopped It All
The gruesome killing of Ketan Agarwal and the death of Twisha Sharma last month raise questions about the rigid culture surrounding marriages in India
-
Opinion | The War On London: How Lies And Bots Are Targeting The City
Research shows that hostile social media narratives describing London as dangerous or in decline have increased by between 150 and 200 per cent over the past two years.
-
In BJP's New UP Team For 2027 Polls, A Caste Counter To Akhilesh Yadav's PDA
After facing a huge setback in Uttar Pradesh in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, the BJP has announced new office bearers, replacing all six regional presidents.
-
Opinion | Iran Peace Process Needs A New Architect, And India Shouldn't Waste Its Chance
Most leaders in the West have all experienced a sharp drop in popularity owing to economic and geopolitical uncertainty. For Delhi, this might be the time to cash in on its multi-alignment framework and cement its place at the high table.
-
Opinion | Britain Seems To Have A New National Hobby: Firing Its Prime Ministers
Britain's Prime Ministers are dropping like mayflies, and nobody seems to be able to stop the mayhem.
-
Opinion | Iran War: Has New Delhi Lost Out, And Has Pak Really Gained? By Shashi Tharoor
To imagine a Nobel Peace for the terrorist-sponsoring Field Marshal Asim Munir may be a fantasy too far. The world sees clearly the difference between an autonomous actor and a message-carrying stool-pigeon.
-
Opinion | Why Indian Parties Are Beginning To Look Like Political 'Spare Parts'
India has thousands of political parties on paper. Some are genuine vehicles of aspiration. But others are beginning to look like political spare parts: useful when the main engine needs reassembly. Maharashtra and West Bengal are examples.
-
India's Rising Nighttime Temperatures Should Worry Us More Than We Think
In the last decade (2012-2022), Mumbai saw 15 additional very warm nights per summer, Bengaluru (11), Bhopal and Jaipur (7 each), Delhi (6), and Chennai (4), as per CEEW report.