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ZDNET’s key takeaways
- RAM prices are soaring primarily due to demand for AI.
- Helium shortages are also contributing to RAM shortages.
- We’re seeing a domino effect on older RAM as manufacturers try to bypass higher prices.
How crazy high are RAM prices right now? So crazy that even moving to RAM technology that’s two decades old won’t help protect consumers from increased costs
Rising RAM prices are pushing up the prices of all your favorite gadgets, such as Raspberry Pi boards (now a pair of 16GB Pi 5 boards will cost you the same as a MacBook Neo), and will likely push up prices for all things Apple in the very near future.
To try to work around these price increases, some hardware manufacturers decided to step back in time and use RAM based on older technologies, but now, with fresh demand, prices for older hardware have gone through the roof.
Why is RAM so expensive?
Bottom line: demand.
Most industry experts blame AI data centers as the main culprit. G.Skill, a leading RAM manufacturer, issued a statement last year explicitly citing “unprecedented high demand from the AI industry” as the reason behind skyrocketing prices.
AI data centers use two types of RAM — High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) and LPDDR5X. A single server rack can consume 20TB of HBM3E and 17TB of LPDDR5X, and that’s enough LPDDR5X for a thousand laptops. And that’s just one server rack out of the thousands that you’ll find in a single data center.
A single Nvidia GB300 has enough LPDDR5X RAM for a thousand laptops.
Nvidia/ZDNET
Data suggests that AI data centers will mop up about 70% of all memory chips produced globally in 2026. And AI companies are willing to pay big bucks to get hold of this RAM, so RAM manufacturers have shifted to prioritizing high-margin DDR5 and HBM RAM server chips. The demand is so great that earlier this year, Micron shuttered its entire consumer-facing Crucial memory brand to focus on enterprise AI customers.
Also: How much RAM does your PC need in 2026? My advice after using Windows and Mac for years
But to be fair, it’s not just AI that’s the problem, though it is the biggest part.
The 2026 war in Iran has also played its part.
While oil supplies have been the primary focus of this conflict, it’s also affected helium supplies. The gas you’re probably most familiar with from those floaty foil birthday balloons also plays a vital role in the semiconductor chip industry. While the US is the biggest producer of helium, the second-largest producer is Qatar, a country across the Persian Gulf from Iran. Following repeated attacks, along with the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, Qatar has essentially been cut off, resulting in the disappearance of a third of the world’s helium supply.
How bad is the problem?
Very bad.
Around this time last year, I could buy a 32GB DDR5 RAM kit for about $100 to $120; now you’re looking at around $400. While DDR5 is the latest and greatest, DDR4 was still in use for a lot of lower-priced systems, but as RAM makers shift production, prices here have increased dramatically.
This time last year, I could pick up a 32GB DDR4 kit for about $60 to $70. Now that same kit is over $200.
How is AI pushing up the prices of legacy RAM?
But none of this can be affecting the price of 20-year-old RAM, right?
Wrong.
Also: Why my Raspberry Pi boards suddenly cost as much as a laptop now – and I’m not surprised
As device manufacturers seek sanely priced RAM, they’ve been looking at legacy RAM in the form of DDR3 (released in 2007) and DDR2 (released in 2003). DDR3 and DDR2, which had vanished from the consumer space, were mostly used in industrial equipment, medical devices, automotive, and networking systems, and were still being manufactured primarily for mission-critical legacy systems that couldn’t be upgraded to newer RAM. Now DDR3 and DDR prices have spiked dramatically.
The demand for this legacy RAM is such that DDR2 prices have spiked by about 60% in Q2 2026 alone. And this isn’t the end of it — TrendForce expects another increase of 35- to 40% over the next quarter.
Pricing is so volatile that we’re now seeing hourly pricing, which makes planning almost impossible for companies.
Why not make more DDR2?
Even if prices of DDR2 hadn’t spiked, it’s not the lifeline that it seems, because it’s essentially obsolete for a lot of applications.
For example, DDR2 isn’t supported by Windows 11 (well, technically, processors that support DDR2 aren’t supported by Windows 11), so even if there were a limitless supply of old RAM modules, it wouldn’t help those looking for a cheap PC or a reasonably priced PC upgrade.
This just affects PCs and servers, right?
Nope.
Smartphone prices have already increased by as much as 25%, with budget phones under $300 being hit hardest.
Also: Solid-state vs. graphene heat dissipation: Why my portable battery of choice is easy
Manufacturers have had to choose between raising prices and engaging in “spec shrinkflation,” reducing RAM and storage to keep prices from rising. Neither of these options will be welcomed by buyers, and analysts predict the global smartphone market will shrink by 2.1% this year.
Will RAM prices stabilize soon?
The most optimistic estimates that I’ve seen for when RAM shortages will ease and things might get better is the second half of 2027, but even if prices come down, that level will be at 60- to 100% above what we were paying in 2024.
Not really the stabilization that most were hoping for.
Why not build more RAM factories?
RAM manufacturers are doing just this, but the problem is that it takes years before a plant produces its first wafer of RAM. And even then, manufacturers will prioritize AI customers.
