In keeping with the spirit of times, Micron on Wednesday announced plans to wind down its Crucial consumer business worldwide by the end of February 2026. The company is reallocating its output and investments to enterprise-grade DRAM and SSD products amid growing demand from the AI sector.
Micron will continue shipping Crucial-badged consumer products through retailers, online stores, and distributors until the end of its fiscal second quarter, which concludes in late February 2026. After that point, Micron will no longer supply the consumer channel with products under the Crucial name, but will continue to ship its Micron-branded enterprise portfolio, which will remain available through commercial and server-focused partners.
After Micron ceases to ship its Crucial devices, it will continue honoring warranty obligations and technical support for existing Crucial products. Customers who already own Crucial-branded memory modules, SSDs, and other products will continue to receive service coverage well after shipments stop, so the decision will not leave installed hardware unsupported.
As expected, Micron is abandoning its consumer business due to reallocation of its 3D NAND and DRAM output and production capacity to enterprise-grade SSDs, high-bandwidth memory (HBM) for AI accelerators, and server-grade memory modules.
"The AI-driven growth in the data center has led to a surge in demand for memory and storage," said Sumit Sadana, EVP and Chief Business Officer at Micron Technology. "Micron has made the difficult decision to exit the Crucial consumer business in order to improve supply and support for our larger, strategic customers in faster-growing segments."
Micron established its Crucial brand some 29 years ago, in 1996, when the enthusiast-grade hardware market began its rapid growth. Over time, Crucial got particularly successful in retail, where its name became synonymous "with technical leadership, quality and reliability," as Micron puts it. However, the current market situation is by far not favorable for these types of products, so instead of shrinking its Crucial portfolio, the company decided to wind it down entirely, albeit without selling off the Crucial brand (at least for now).
There are several reasons behind Micron's decision.
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Firstly, client memory modules and SSDs sit at the lowest-margin end of Micron's portfolio as they compete in highly volatile, price-competitive, and promotion-driven market. Even though the Crucial and Ballistix brands still matter, they are squeezed between high-end enthusiast brands and low-end consumer brands, which makes their evolution difficult. By contrast, data center and enterprise products lock in long-term contracts, higher ASPs, and more predictable demand.
Secondly, the supply environment has changed permanently. AI infrastructure requires every single wafer with memory it can consume, something that has never happened with any industry megatrend previously. This means that every wafer Micron assigns to consumer parts is a wafer not going to a hyperscaler or enterprise contract. As a result, keeping a consumer line would directly limit Micron's ability to fulfill orders from its largest customers, which is a risk for profits and strategic relationships.
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