Samsung Memory: Prices Spike 80% Now
AI Boom Ignites 80% Memory Price Surge: Shield Your Budget Now
26 gen 2026 (Aggiornato il 16 feb 2026) - Scritto da Christian Tico
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Christian Tico
26 gen 2026 (Aggiornato il 16 feb 2026)
Samsung's Massive Memory Price Surge: Up to 80% Hikes Fuel AI Data Center Boom
Samsung Electronics is driving a dramatic wave of memory price increases, with some products spiking by as much as 80% or even doubling overnight, largely to meet surging demand from AI data centers. This shift prioritizes high-end enterprise memory over consumer goods, reshaping the global electronics supply chain and raising costs across industries.
Why Samsung Is Raising Memory Prices So Aggressively
The core driver behind these hikes is the explosive growth in AI applications, which require vast amounts of specialized memory like High Bandwidth Memory (HBM). Samsung has reallocated production capacity toward these premium products, which command prices over 40% higher than consumer-grade alternatives due to their superior reliability and stability.
Enterprise DRAM and SSD prices have nearly doubled or tripled in recent months, while NAND flash memory faces hikes exceeding 50% in early 2026. Samsung's low inventory levels, at just six weeks of supply compared to the usual 10-12 weeks, further tighten the market and boost pricing power.
Specific Price Jumps and Market Impacts
Samsung recently increased 32GB DDR5 module prices from $149 to $239, a 60% rise, with contract pricing for DDR5 surging over 100% to $19.50 per unit. Overall DRAM prices have climbed 50% year-to-date, with analysts forecasting another 30% in late 2025 and 20% more in early 2026.
- DDR5 64GB RDIMM modules for data centers could double in price by end-2026 compared to early 2025 levels.
- Gartner predicts a 47% DRAM price increase across the board in 2026 due to undersupply.
- NAND prices from Samsung and rivals are set for 50-80% jumps, affecting SSDs and storage devices.
AI Data Centers Devour Supply, Sparking Shortages
Data centers are projected to consume 70% of all memory chips produced in 2026, leaving shortages that ripple through other sectors. HBM production for AI accelerators uses three times the wafer capacity of standard DRAM per gigabyte, forcing manufacturers to cut back on legacy chips for consumer electronics.
This "permanent reallocation" of capacity means even older memory types for TVs, cars, smartphones, and appliances face delays and price surges. Experts warn of automotive production issues reminiscent of COVID-era shortages, with capacity booked through 2028.
Broader Industry Ripple Effects
Memory costs could soon represent 10% of electronics prices and 30% for smartphones, potentially dipping PC sales by 9% and smartphone shipments by 5% in 2026. Hyperscalers gain procurement leverage, but everyday buyers in enterprise IT face unavoidable cost hikes regardless of vendor.
Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron lead this supplier-driven market, with earnings calls on January 29 likely to reflect these gains from enterprise prioritization.
Conclusion: A New Era for Memory Pricing
Samsung's strategy underscores a fundamental shift: AI's insatiable demand is redrawing production priorities, ensuring higher profits for memory giants but challenging affordability elsewhere.
Businesses and consumers should prepare for sustained price pressures and explore alternatives like optimized inventory or legacy tech upgrades while supplies last.
While AI data centers hoard premium memory, Samsung's low consumer inventories and enterprise pivot could inadvertently revive DDR4 ecosystems and microSD slots, trapping budget PC and smartphone buyers in profitable obsolescence loops that extend upgrade cycles far beyond 2026.
