Tim Cook confirms Apple price hikes are coming, iPhones could jump $200 or more

Daniel Sims

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Ripple effect: As demand from AI data centers pushes memory and storage costs to stratospheric highs, hardware manufacturers across the tech industry have raised prices while seeing shipments decline. Apple's outsized supply chain muscle has mostly shielded it from the trend so far, but the tech giant's CEO recently admitted that even it can't simply absorb rising component costs forever.

Apple CEO Tim Cook recently told The Wall Street Journal that raising prices across its product lineup will become unavoidable this year due to continually inflating memory costs. The company has not yet determined which devices will see hikes or how severe they will be, but WSJ estimates that base-model iPhones could rise by more than $200.

Since AI data centers began siphoning most DRAM and NAND production capacity last year, building PCs with DDR5 RAM has become virtually impossible, the retail SSD market has almost vanished, and knock-on effects have cascaded throughout consumer tech.

Smartphones shipments recently hit historic lows, game consoles are nearing the $1,000 mark, and PC manufacturers are resurrecting older hardware. Microsoft recently confirmed that it now pays four times as much for memory as it did late last year, and memory now represents most of the Nothing phone's bill of materials.

Apple's products have not experienced anything nearly as severe thus far. In fact, the company recently released a $599 MacBook that sent shockwaves throughout the laptop industry. Apple is even expected to double production of the MacBook Neo, although it remains unclear how or if it plans to maintain its record-low entry price.

Cook stated that, while Apple has attempted to minimize the impact of rising memory costs while maintaining its profit margins, the situation has become unsustainable. The company has traditionally enjoyed a privileged position among supply chain customers, but the AI wave has managed to outmuscle even the Cupertino giant.

The full extent of the damage is expected to become public when the company unveils the iPhone 18 and likely the iPhone Ultra in September, but prices of Macs and iPads might rise sooner. The CEO called the situation the worst price swing he has seen in his 40 years working in electronics, describing it as a hundred-year flood.

Even aside from the RAM crisis, Apple's fall 2026 hardware lineup was already expected to be expensive. Experts estimate that the foldable iPhone Ultra will start at no less than $2,000. Furthermore, the only other new iPhone debuting this year will likely be the iPhone 18 Pro, as the standard iPhone 18 is not expected to arrive until 2027. The MacBook is also anticipated to receive an Ultra-tier device this year, featuring a touchscreen and Apple's yet-to-be-announced M6 processor.

Experts expect memory costs to remain elevated beyond 2027.

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Hey now, somebody's gotta pay for all these investments in anti-human customer surveillance technology. The customer.
 
The prices rising are solely because Apple wants to maintain criminally high margins. They could easily keep price rises to $50-100 and make a metric sh!t ton profit of each phone.
 
The prices rising are solely because Apple wants to maintain criminally high margins. They could easily keep price rises to $50-100 and make a metric sh!t ton profit of each phone.

Their hardware margins aren’t actually that high they make most of their money through the App Store on iOS
 
Their hardware margins aren’t actually that high they make most of their money through the App Store on iOS
They are very high on the hardware as well. The bill of materials for an iPhone is less than half of what you end up paying for one (and oftentimes closer to a third than to half).
 
They are very high on the hardware as well. The bill of materials for an iPhone is less than half of what you end up paying for one (and oftentimes closer to a third than to half).
That would be great of the BOM made up the entire cost of the device where the margin is judged from. Once you factor in manufacturer, assembly, the more expensive than market value components (due to their environmental policies), warranty repair, support over time, shipping, taxes etc that margin comes down a lot.
 
Their hardware margins aren’t actually that high they make most of their money through the App Store on iOS
What a crock. Apple several years ago made 85% of the entire phone market profits with well under 40% global share. Make me laugh harder.
 
All things considered, it is not the end of the world. 200 + to a 1400 device is, well it is disappointing but not a catastrophe.
In addition, Apple users get the best trade in deals for their phones. Slap a case on it, do not drop it, and
your next one costs like a mid-tier Android cellphone.
 
I went out and got it. $100 off + 3% discount on Applecard.

Nice.

I am planning to purchase the 17e or 17 standard soon.
I read the article, but does anyone know specifically when these price increases will occur?

I believe the 17 is the current model? Not researched much. But as a procasinator I will expedite purchase.
I live in Jpn btw but usually Apple price increases are the same time (USA & Japan.)

One differerence. Japanese LOVE iPhone. :heart_eyes:
Android systems are not popular really.
As a result, prices are already high, and it's possible the increase will be higher in Japan. I need to find out myself, but so far this topic is barely mentioned in Japan, and with no detail.

TBH: If Apple increased all prices by 50% Japanese would still stick with the iPhone.
Sound crazy? Well the Japanese are in crazy love with all things iPhone!!

Heck if they doubled the price they would lose sales, probably, but not by half. Needs to be seen to be believed. Apple outlets are like Starbucks. Just more of them. Yep even rural areas. In a small village, the only shop is often an iPhone outlet, and likely a rice/seaweed shop. Yep. It's true. 😙
 
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All things considered, it is not the end of the world. 200 + to a 1400 device is, well it is disappointing but not a catastrophe.
In addition, Apple users get the best trade in deals for their phones. Slap a case on it, do not drop it, and
your next one costs like a mid-tier Android cellphone.
Or get AppleCare and get a new phone when it mysteriously impacts the floor just before you sell it
 
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