- Apple has started charging more for select iPads and MacBooks as AI drives up memory chip costs.
- HomePod speakers and Apple TV devices are also part of this round of price increases.
- The iPhone escaped this round, but analysts warn that higher prices may still be coming.
- Check your battery, storage, discounts and trade-in value before buying anything new.
Apple has started charging more for some of its products, and AI is one of the big reasons why. The increases apply to select iPads and MacBooks, along with HomePod speakers and Apple TV devices. Apple’s own store pages now show higher prices on several models than earlier launch materials listed. The iPhone was not included in this round, but analysts warn that may not last.
Apple says it can no longer fully shield customers from soaring memory and storage chip costs tied to AI data center demand. The pressure comes from what some in the tech industry are calling RAMageddon. AI data centers need huge amounts of DRAM and high-bandwidth memory to train and run advanced models. Those are the same basic chip categories that help power phones, laptops, tablets, game consoles and other devices sitting in your home right now.

Why AI is making memory chips harder to get
AI gets a lot of attention for chatbots, image tools and smart assistants. Behind the scenes, though, it runs on massive hardware systems. Those systems need powerful processors. They also need a lot of memory. That is where the pressure builds. High-bandwidth memory, often called HBM, helps AI chips move huge amounts of data quickly. Data centers want more of it, and chipmakers are chasing that demand because AI hardware can bring in big money.
At the same time, everyday tech still needs regular DRAM and NAND storage. Phones use memory to keep apps running smoothly. Macs need it for multitasking. Apple’s iPad, Apple Watch and Vision Pro rely on memory and storage too. In other words, AI companies and consumer gadget makers are now competing for parts from the same broader supply chain. When supply gets tight, prices usually move one way.
Why Apple feels the squeeze
Apple has enormous buying power. That usually helps the company secure parts at better prices. But even Apple has limits when an entire market tightens.
Tim Cook, Apple’s outgoing CEO, had warned that memory costs would increasingly affect Apple after the June quarter. Now, Apple says it has reached the point where it needs to begin passing some of those costs to customers.
That is important because hardware margins are a huge part of Apple’s business. A higher memory bill can eat into profits fast, especially on premium devices that ship in massive numbers.
The iPhone escaped this round, but analysts expect Apple may raise iPhone prices in the coming months. Apple could still handle the iPhone differently by raising only Pro model prices, adjusting storage tiers, leaning on carrier promotions or pushing trade-in offers harder to soften the blow.

Apple has another AI problem too
This memory crunch comes at a tricky time for Apple. The company has been under pressure to show that its AI strategy can keep up with rivals. Earlier this year, Apple agreed to a $250 million settlement tied to claims that it overstated or delayed certain AI features connected to Siri and Apple Intelligence. Apple denied wrongdoing, but the case added to the pressure around its AI rollout.
Then at WWDC 2026, Apple showed off a major Siri overhaul and the next generation of Apple Intelligence. Those features could make Apple devices more useful, especially if Siri becomes better at understanding personal context, what is on your screen and what you are trying to do. But there is a catch. More on-device AI can also raise hardware demands over time. If future Apple features need more memory, more storage or more powerful chips, the premium models may become even more expensive. That puts Apple in a tough spot. It needs to prove its AI features are worth the wait. At the same time, the parts needed to support that AI push are getting more expensive.
Which Apple products got more expensive?
The current price increases apply to select iPads and MacBooks, along with HomePod speakers and Apple TV devices.
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The MacBook Neo’s starting price moved from $599 to $699, months after launch. The MacBook Air with 512GB of storage rose to $1,299 from $1,099. The 14-inch MacBook Pro with 1TB of storage rose to $1,999 from $1,699. The iPad Air with 128GB of storage rose to $749 from $599.
The price increases also hit Apple’s home devices. The HomePod mini rose to $129 from $99, while HomePod rose to $349 from $299. Apple TV rose to $199 from $129.
The iPhone is still the big product to watch because it sells in huge numbers. If Apple raises iPhone prices next, you would feel that faster than a change to a smaller product line. The Pro models may be especially vulnerable because they tend to carry more advanced chips, more memory and higher storage options.
What you can do before more Apple prices rise
Here is where things get useful. You cannot control the memory chip market. But you can make a smarter buying decision before paying more than you expected.
1) Check whether you really need a new device now
Start with your current device. If the only problem is battery life, a battery replacement may buy you more time for far less than a new iPhone or Mac. That is especially true if your device still runs the latest software and handles your daily routine well.
On an iPhone, go to Settings > Battery > Battery Health & Charging. If the battery health has dropped a lot, compare the cost of service with the cost of replacing the phone. You can also check out our guide on whether you should replace your phone battery or buy a new phone.
2) Look at your storage before you overbuy
Do not guess how much storage you need. Check it first.
On iPhone or iPad, go to Settings > General > iPhone Storage or iPad Storage. You will see which apps, photos, videos and messages are taking up space.
On Mac, click the Apple menu > System Settings > General > Storage.
Storage controls how much you can keep on your device. Memory helps your device handle apps and tasks while you use it. Both can affect the price, but they are different things. Before paying for a bigger storage tier, try clearing space first. Delete large message attachments, remove old downloads, offload apps you rarely use and move photos or videos you want to keep onto cloud storage or an external drive.
If you are only using half your storage after years with a device, you may not need to pay for the largest storage tier next time. On the other hand, buying too little storage can become expensive too, especially if your phone is always full.
For more step-by-step help, check out our guides on how to free up iPhone storage, how to clean up your phone and how to transfer photos from your phone to a hard drive.
3) Check your Mac’s memory needs before you upgrade
If you are buying a Mac, storage is only part of the decision. Apple’s newer Macs use unified memory, and you usually cannot upgrade it later. That means the amount you choose at checkout can affect how long the computer feels fast.
On Mac, open Activity Monitor by going to Finder > Applications > Utilities > Activity Monitor. Then click the Memory tab. Look at Memory Pressure.
If it stays green during your normal workday, your current memory setup may be enough. If it often turns yellow or red while you edit video, keep lots of browser tabs open or use demanding apps, more memory may be worth paying for upfront.
4) Watch current prices before the fall launches
If you already planned to buy an iPhone, iPad or Mac this year, track current pricing now. Look at Apple, carriers, major retailers and warehouse clubs. Save the current price so you can compare it later. That helps you spot a real deal versus a marketing discount that only looks good. It also helps you see whether a product has already jumped in price before you buy.
5) Look for discounts before paying full price
Before you buy directly from Apple, check whether you qualify for education pricing, employer discounts, carrier offers or warehouse club deals. Some discounts are straightforward. Others come with strings attached, especially carrier promotions. Look at the full monthly cost, not just the upfront device price.
6) Consider Apple Certified Refurbished
Apple’s Certified Refurbished store can be worth checking before paying full price. These devices go through Apple’s testing process and include a one-year warranty. The selection changes, so it works best when you have some flexibility on color, storage or model. For many people, a refurbished Mac or iPad from Apple can be a smarter buy than stretching for the newest version at the highest price. You can also check out our guides on the best ways to give your old iPhone a second life and how to know when it is time to replace your Mac.
7) Compare trade-in offers before you commit
Trade-in values can vary between Apple, carriers and retailers. Before you buy, check more than one offer. A carrier may give you a bigger credit, but it may require a specific plan or a long bill-credit period. That is where people get tripped up. A “free” phone may be tied to 24 or 36 months of service. Make sure the plan cost still makes sense.
8) Do not buy only because of AI
AI features can sound exciting during a product launch. But ask yourself what you will use every week. Better battery life, a stronger camera, more storage or a faster laptop may matter more to you than a new assistant feature. Also, some AI features can arrive later through software updates. Others may require newer hardware. Before upgrading, check which features actually work on the device you are buying.
Related Links:
- 12 biggest Apple WWDC 2026 takeaways you need to know
- Is Apple Intelligence on your iPhone really secure?
- Are Apple devices spying? What your iPhone tracks
Kurt’s key takeaways
AI is no longer something happening only inside data centers. It is now affecting the price of devices you use every day. Apple has already started charging more for select iPads and Macs, along with HomePod speakers and Apple TV devices. The iPhone escaped this round, but that may not last. Before buying anything new, check your current device first. A battery replacement, storage cleanup, trade-in offer or refurbished model may save you money. Also, do not pay extra for AI features unless you know you will actually use them.
Now that Apple prices are rising, does it make you want to pause on buying anything new and hold on to what you already have? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.
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