Apple’s outgoing CEO Tim Cook has admitted that surging memory chip costs have made price increases unavoidable, a striking concession from a company that has long prided itself on shielding customers from supply chain pressures.
In a candid interview with the Wall Street Journal, Cook acknowledged that the world’s most valuable technology company had reached a breaking point. “We’re doing our best to mitigate the huge increases that are being passed to us, and we’ve been trying to shield our customers from the increases, but the situation has become unsustainable,” he said.
Industry data show that the price of RAM, once among the most affordable components in consumer electronics, has more than doubled since October 2025 alone. What was once a manageable cost of doing business has ballooned into one of the sector’s most pressing financial challenges.
The problem has been dramatically worsened by an unlikely geopolitical flashpoint thousands of miles from Silicon Valley. The ongoing war in Iran has severely disrupted global supplies of helium, a gas few outside the semiconductor industry would associate with their smartphones, yet one that is indispensable to chip manufacturing. The resulting supply crunch has sent production costs spiraling further upward, squeezing manufacturers at both ends.
“There’s less supply at a time when consumers want devices and the memory guys are passing along huge price increases,” Cook said pointedly.
While Cook stopped short of specifying which products would be affected or when price changes would take effect, all eyes in the industry are now firmly fixed on the anticipated iPhone 18 lineup, scheduled for its customary September launch.
The timing is particularly charged: September is also the month Cook himself is set to step down after 15 transformative years at Apple’s helm, handing the reins to hardware engineering chief John Ternus.
According to smartphone market analyst Chiew Le Xuan of research firm Omdia, Apple’s next generation of devices could cost consumers up to $150 more than their iPhone 17 equivalents, driven not only by memory costs but also by the hardware upgrades required to support Apple’s expanding suite of artificial intelligence features.
Omdia’s broader projections paint a sobering picture for consumers globally: the average selling price of smartphones is expected to rise by approximately 20 percent in 2026, reaching an all-time high.
Apple is far from alone in its predicament, and the widening circle of affected companies suggests this is less a corporate crisis than a structural shift reshaping the entire technology sector.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the foundry responsible for producing some of the world’s most advanced chips, including those designed by Apple, Nvidia, and AMD, has declined to rule out raising its own prices as inflationary pressures mount.
Samsung, the South Korean electronics behemoth, issued similar warnings earlier this year, cautioning that memory shortages would inevitably filter through to higher consumer prices.
In April, Sony raised the price of its PlayStation 5 by £90 in the United Kingdom and $100 in the United States, invoking “continued pressures in the global economic landscape.” Nintendo swiftly followed, announcing that its Switch 2 console would carry a higher price tag from September, citing shifting market conditions.
Chiew noted that the response across the smartphone industry has been swift and multifaceted. “Most smartphone brands have already raised prices, pulled back on promotions, or cut specifications to protect their profit margins in response to rising costs,” he told the BBC. His assessment carries a stark finality: “This is the new pricing reality, not a temporary spike.”
Earlier this year, the company quietly discontinued the entry-level version of its Mac Mini compact computer, a move that, while framed as a product portfolio rationalization, had the practical effect of raising the Mac Mini’s starting price by around $200 (£150). Industry observers now view that decision as an early indicator of the broader pricing strategy to come.
The iPhone 17 lineup, launched last September, has exceeded expectations, with Apple reporting a 17 percent increase in device sales during the first three months of 2026 compared to the same period a year earlier, a figure buoyed significantly by robust demand in China.
Whether that loyalty will withstand the shock of substantially higher prices for the iPhone 18 remains the defining question for Apple’s next chapter and for its incoming chief executive, who will inherit both the company’s enviable position and its most pressing commercial test in years.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Apple has warned that rising memory chip costs, fuelled by AI-driven demand and geopolitical disruptions to helium supplies, have made price increases across its products unavoidable.
The iPhone 18, expected in September, could cost up to $150 more than its predecessor. This is not an Apple problem alone; Sony, Nintendo, Samsung, and TSMC are all adjusting to the same pressures.
As analyst Chiew Le Xuan puts it plainly, this is the new pricing reality, not a temporary spike, and consumers worldwide should brace for a fundamentally more expensive era of consumer electronics.













