Top Brands increase Smartphone Costs by 40%

MySandesh
2 Min Read

India’s smartphone market is seeing steep price hikes, with top brands like Vivo, Samsung, Oppo, Xiaomi, and Realme raising prices—some by up to 40%.

This comes at a time when sales were already slow, and consumers were hesitant to upgrade.

Why Smartphone Prices Are Rising

AI Boom and Chip Shortages

Global demand for AI infrastructure is causing a shortage of memory chips.

Companies like Nvidia are prioritizing data centers over smartphones, which has:

Reduced the supply of smartphone-grade chips

Increased memory chip prices by over 120% recently

Raised memory costs to 40% of smartphone production, up from 18% earlier

Brands are passing these higher costs directly to consumers.

West Asia Conflict Driving Costs Up

Geopolitical tensions in West Asia have pushed up:

Raw material costs like plastics and electronic components

Logistics and shipping expenses

Together, these factors are adding significantly to smartphone production costs.

How Much Prices Have Increased

Price jumps are noticeable across all segments:

Vivo: Budget phones went from ₹9,999 to ₹13,999 (~40%)

Samsung: Mid-range devices rose 30–36%

Oppo: Increases up to ₹2,000 per model

Realme & Xiaomi: Some models up by 50%

Even tablets and entry-level devices are affected, signaling a market-wide trend.

Impact on Consumers and the Market

The timing is tough for buyers:

Rising fuel and LPG costs are squeezing budgets

Many are delaying or skipping smartphone upgrades

Experts warn of a potential 10% drop in smartphone sales

Retailers say prices aren’t likely to drop soon, as:

Chip prices may not stabilize before mid-2027

AI demand continues to dominate supply chains

Further price hikes are expected

The Bigger Picture: The “AI Tax”

This surge shows a global trend where AI-driven demand is indirectly raising costs for consumers. Electronics are becoming more expensive, and innovation cycles are slowing.

For India, the world’s second-largest smartphone market, these changes may reshape buying habits for years, with consumers opting for fewer upgrades but higher-priced devices.

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