US RAM crisis hits boiling point as AI mania wipes out all 32GB DDR5 kits under $359 — cheaper kits vanish from shelves within seconds of listing
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While the best RAM is still available for purchase, prices have surged exponentially as the AI-created memory supply intensifies. With no clear end in sight for the shortage, prices continue to skyrocket at an unprecedented rate. The situation has escalated so rapidly that 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5 memory kits are now selling for $359.99 at U.S. retailers.
It’s astonishing and at the same time sad that $359.99 has become the new baseline for 32GB DDR5 memory kits. The relentless memory shortage sent shockwaves through the memory market, as affordable memory kits disappeared almost instantly, leaving consumers competing for whatever remained. The only silver lining is that, at this premium price point, the available options at least offer decent specifications.
At $359.99, you're limited to Silicon Power’s XPower Storm DDR5-6000 C36, Crucial’s Pro DDR5-6400 C38, or Corsair’s Vengeance DDR5-6000 C36 memory kits, all of which deliver decent performance. Just a couple of months ago, the first two memory kits were retailing for $325.97 and $292.99, respectively — today's prices are a bitter pill to swallow, for sure. In an interesting twist, Corsair's memory kit has actually become more affordable, down from $429.99.
The Vengeance DDR5-6000 C38 memory kit is a solid option for AMD and Intel systems. It's currently the most affordable 32GB DDR5 memory in a market with fast-changing prices.
To put things in perspective, the Silicon Power, Crucial, and Corsair memory kits were available for $269.99, $272.99, and $280.99, respectively, in Nov. 2025. It's a stark reminder of how drastically the memory kit has shifted. With increases of up to 33% in just a few months, the landscape is grim for PC owners and builders.
Scalpers are ruthlessly capitalizing on the memory shortage. In a twist of irony, they're leveraging the very force blamed for the crisis, AI, to intensify the scarcity even further: Scalpers have turned to AI to deploy DRAM bots to snatch up DDR5 deals online and relist the memory kits at jaw-dropping prices for desperate buyers. That’s why you now see astronomical listings on Amazon, such as the G.Skill Aegis 5 DDR5-6000 C36 for $1,236.75, or the Patriot Viper Xtreme 5 RGB DDR5-7800 C38 for $1,133.25. These two memory kits are normally priced at less than $120 — but we don't have a time machine.
The memory supply is dwindling, and the spiraling prices show no signs of stabilizing, which is expected when you're in the midst of a shortage. On top of that, AI-fueled bots are outpacing human shoppers. If this trend continues — and it likely will — memory upgrades will soon be out of reach for the average consumer.
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Zhiye Liu is a news editor, memory reviewer, and SSD tester at Tom’s Hardware. Although he loves everything that’s hardware, he has a soft spot for CPUs, GPUs, and RAM.
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Roland Of Gilead Ok, I get why the article was written, it's at least informative somewhat in terms of the high prices and current global supply gut. However, I think it's alittle cynical to recommend the most expensive set of the three highlighted. It's not a deal. It's gouging.Reply -
philged Also, Tom's posted this article 7 hours ago with the tagline, "RAM price increases are slowing down, but it's still not a sign that costs will start stabilizing."Reply
And now RAM prices continue to skyrocket with no end in sight? -
BloodLust2222 Once all the scalpers who bought up the high priced kits can't sell them, Prices will fall. This is nothing but a manufactured crises. With articles like these making matters worse as everyone is trying to make a quick buck.Reply -
usertests 16 GB (2x8) kits are $230 and up, which is even worse per GB.Reply
I don't think $360 is unusual for 32 GB in recent weeks, there's no spike here. -
timsSOFTWARE I think it will be a rough few years for PC builders, because I expect most people will not upgrade their PCs unless forced to, until around 2029 - it's several years out, but it doesn't seem like there will be much that's new in the consumer hardware space in the meantime anyway, with all of the focus going to server/datacenter.Reply
$350 is about what I was willing to pay for 128GB, and there is really nothing that could happen on the perf/new technology front that would make anything new worth buying as long as memory prices stay as high as they are.
