The RAM pricing crisis has only just started, Team Group GM warns — says problem will get worse in 2026 as DRAM and NAND prices double in one month
The ongoing structural change of the DRAM market caused by the shift of manufacturing capacities to production of high bandwidth memory (HBM) for AI accelerators has already caused a massive price hike of commodity DDR and LPDDR memory — but the worst is yet to come.
According to the general manager of Chinese memory giant TeamGroup, contract prices of DRAM and NAND products have almost doubled recently. Supply of commodity memory is set to worsen in early 2026, and normalization is unlikely before 2027 – 2028 when more production capacity emerges, reports DigiTimes.
December contract prices of some categories of DRAM and 3D NAND increased 80% to 100% month-on-month, according to Gerry Chen, general manager of TeamGroup, a prominent maker of memory modules, solid-state drives, and products based on 3D NAND. Spot prices tell a similar story. A 16Gb DDR5 chip was priced at $6.84 on average at DRAMeXchange on September 20. On November 19 average spot price was $24.83, but on December 1 average spot price of a 16 Gb DDR5 IC increased to $27.2 (session low was $19, session high was $37).
Essentially, memory alone for a 16 GB memory module costs around $217.6. A PCB, assembly, and testing, additional parts like PMIC will add $8 – $10, so a 16 GB memory module now costs $225 – $228 without manufacturer premiums, logistics, and taxes.
Chen expects availability of DRAM and NAND to worsen in the first and second quarters of 2026 once distribution stockpiles are exhausted. At that point, he cautions, obtaining allocation could become difficult regardless of willingness to pay. In his view, relief would not come quickly: he projects the current shortages to extend into late 2027 and potentially beyond.
The reason for shortages of commodity memory is well known: DRAM makers reallocate their production capacities to HBM (which uses larger DRAM dies than commodity types of memory) that is consumed by AI accelerators, like Nvidia's B300 or custom accelerators by large cloud service providers, such as AWS, Google, and Microsoft. These companies tend to book supply years in advance, so at some point, DRAM makers will not have enough capacity to meet demand for commodity DRAMs.
Building a new greenfield fab takes at least three years, so even if companies like Micron, Samsung, or SK hynix made a decision to build a memory fab today, it would come online in late 2028 at the earliest and would be fully ramped only sometime in 2029.
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When it comes to NAND, NAND suppliers also prioritize large customers, which happen to be makers of AI servers. Chen does not expect capacity to swing back to PCs, smartphones, and other consumer devices in 2026, which will affect the prices of these devices.
The effects are clear to see. Enthusiasts are seeing RAM prices for custom-built PCs increase by orders of magnitude week on week, with 64GB of DDR5 RAM now costing more than a PS5 in some cases. This week's Black Friday and Cyber Monday RAM deals might be the last chance to buy RAM before prices skyrocket even further.
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Anton Shilov is a contributing writer at Tom’s Hardware. Over the past couple of decades, he has covered everything from CPUs and GPUs to supercomputers and from modern process technologies and latest fab tools to high-tech industry trends.
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russell_john The 32GB DDR5 6000 CL30 RAM I bought in late March for $99 is now going from the same vendor for $297 or exactly triple what I paid for it just 8 months ago ...... I'm glad I don't have to worry about it for the next year or twoReply -
Shiznizzle Reply
3 weeks ago the 32GB 6000 38CL kit, which is not even good latency but will do for awhile, was 149 pounds. 5 weeks ago this kit was not even 80 poundsrussell_john said:The 32GB DDR5 6000 CL30 RAM I bought in late March for $99 is now going from the same vendor for $297 or exactly triple what I paid for it just 8 months ago ...... I'm glad I don't have to worry about it for the next year or two
Overclockers in the UK last priced it at 419 pounds. 554 dollars for 32GB of mediocre DDR5.
Double for manufacturers. Triple for us consumers.
I am glad that i at least have some DDR5 now cos i can move up to Am5 even though my systems does not really need to move up.
I could ride out this R 7 5800x, 32 GB 3600 DDR4, AMD 9060XT 16GB, 2 TB 990 EVO Plus M2 out till possibly Am6.
The 9060 gives me solid 60 FPS at 1080. I dont need much. The only reason i wanted to move up to AM5 was to take full advantage of the 9060 in a PCIe 5 slot -
abufrejoval Well, on one hand this is going to seriously blunt the leading edge of all those new desktop CPUs coming out, because those would need matching memory to shine.Reply
On the other hand it's a lot of opportunities to become creative and recycle things that were going to scrap: I like that game more than the actual gaming: for me that's validation and I leave that mostly to the kids.
E.g. I did buy some SO-DIMM to DIMM adapters for DDR4 and DDR5 when I when big on buying 32GB SO-DIMMs for my µ-servers, just in case I'd want to reuse that RAM after those NUCalikes had lost their low-power appeal. They seem to work, but I haven't really doubled down to see how timing and reliability might be impacted. They were dirt cheap so I just added them to the shopping basket on AliExpress, I didn't bet the farm on them.
Too bad you can't split the capacity, too, because most other use cases don't really require 64GB RAM capacity and single channel RAM pains me physically; perhaps others might be more pinched not having a system at all. And that's one way to make productive use of these huge caches, right? 😜
How much one would invest into that obviously depends on how big AI will remain. But just trying to think on how much those huge megavendors have riding on their predictions, makes me rather glad I'm doing no more than DIY these days.
For those who've been ditching older hardware because of W11: you know that Win11 24H2 IoT LTSC is supported until 2034 and runs on anything that supports POPCNT (since Nehalem) without a TPU, right? And you can excise CoPilot and all those other M$ nasties with slimmed down ISOs as well.
While I don't mind playing around with Bazzite (or any other form of Linux), the kids really prefer to spend their time in-game, especially since they've become working adults with less fun time to spare. -
einheriar Looks like I am going to be a little longer on my am4 systems than anticipated.. I have 64GB in each PC (work PC and gaming PC) so I guess I need to upgrade my work PC to a 5950x (gaming has 580x3d) Getting the AM5 in 2026 -27 is going to be a bizarre money sink. Sp CPU upgrade and a new gaming graphics card will have to carry me over the next two yearsReply -
SayAgain Samsung leaked emails indicating this is entirely a “profit” strategy and nothing to do with supply and demand … just controlling the supply. I guess they learnt from nVidia how to manipulate the market for huge profit. The corporate world of excessive greed … or the failure of unregulated capitalism, take your pick.Reply
Samsung tried to suggest it was high demand from AI servers until some of their internal emails were leaked by hackers that breached their servers. -
EzzyB Replyrussell_john said:The 32GB DDR5 6000 CL30 RAM I bought in late March for $99 is now going from the same vendor for $297 or exactly triple what I paid for it just 8 months ago ...... I'm glad I don't have to worry about it for the next year or two
Not even that long ago. I bought 48GB of DDR5 6000 CL 30 in September for $139. Apparently I got in just under the wire.