Nothing CEO Carl Pei dropped a warning that should terrify anyone planning a phone upgrade: RAM now accounts for over 50% of a new phone’s hardware cost. That memory chip once buried in the spec sheet? It’s now more expensive than the processor and display combined. This isn’t some corporate spin—Pei watched his Nothing Phone (4a) memory costs double during development, then double again after launch. A 4x price spike that makes even seasoned tech executives wince.
AI Demand Is Eating the World’s Memory Supply #
The culprit behind this memory massacre? AI data centers gorging themselves on every available DRAM chip. While ChatGPT processes your vacation photo requests, the same memory factories that supply your phone are prioritizing high-margin server contracts.
DDR5 prices have tripled or quadrupled in months—imagine if gas jumped from $3 to $12 per gallon overnight. That’s essentially what happened to the chips inside your pocket computer. The AI boom has fundamentally altered the memory supply chain, diverting wafer capacity away from consumer devices toward lucrative data center contracts.
Your Upgrade Window Is Closing Fast #
Pei’s advice cuts like a knife: “The best time was yesterday. The next best time is now.” Translation? Those Black Friday phone discounts you’re counting on probably won’t exist. When memory eats half the hardware budget, manufacturers can’t slash prices 30% without bleeding money.
He’s already seeing phones launch $100 higher than their predecessors, with Indian markets experiencing ₹7,000 jumps on mid-range models. The era of patient shoppers getting rewarded is ending as memory shortages force immediate cost pass-through to consumers.
Specs Are Getting Weird in All the Wrong Ways #
The memory crunch is forcing uncomfortable trade-offs. IDC analysts expect some budget phones to retreat to 4GB configurations—specs that felt outdated three years ago. Meanwhile, flagship phones planning 24GB RAM for AI features are scaling back to 16GB maximum.
You’re essentially paying more for less, like ordering a smaller pizza at a higher price because cheese got expensive. This structural shift could persist into 2027, according to industry forecasts. The smartphone industry built its business model on components getting cheaper over time. When the opposite happens, something’s got to give—and that something is your wallet.