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The RAM crisis is here — and it may ruin these 5 Android phones

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Why This Matters

The surge in RAM prices driven by AI industry demand is impacting the cost and availability of Android smartphones, potentially leading to higher prices and reduced features for consumers. This crisis could influence the future of popular devices like Motorola Razr, Google Pixel 11, and Samsung Galaxy Z Flip, affecting their market competitiveness and innovation. Industry stakeholders should monitor these trends as they may reshape smartphone pricing strategies and product offerings.

Key Takeaways

Joe Maring / Android Authority

RAM prices have exploded in recent months owing to demand from AI-related companies. Unfortunately, this has resulted in various tech products seeing price increases, too.

Smartphones aren’t immune to this trend, either. The recently launched Galaxy S26 phones have seen price hikes, while OPPO, vivo, and OnePlus have all announced price increases in China.

It’s only a matter of time until more phones are affected by these price hikes, particularly in global markets. Here are a few notable Android phones that might be ruined by this RAM crisis.

Which Android phone will suffer the most due to the RAM crisis? 50 votes Motorola Razr (2026) 10 % Google Pixel 11 46 % Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 8 8 % Samsung Galaxy A08 16 % OnePlus 16 16 % Other (let us know in the comments) 4 %

Motorola Razr (2026)

Ryan Haines / Android Authority

Motorola is the top foldable phone maker in the US, accounting for nearly 50% of the market according to the IDC. That’s in large part due to phones like the competitively priced Razr (2025). The Razr (2026) is on the horizon, but I’m worried that it’ll be ruined by ballooning RAM and component prices.

The Razr (2025) launched at $699, but still delivered plenty of notable features. This includes a large cover display with fantastic software, a solid rear camera pairing, an IP48 rating (up from IPX8 in 2024), a 4,500mAh battery, and 15W wireless charging.

However, I’m concerned that Motorola could offer minimal upgrades or even downgrades to maintain that competitive price tag. I really hope it doesn’t downgrade the already middling Dimensity 7400X chipset. The other possibility is that Motorola hides a price hike behind some upgrades, as we saw with the base Galaxy S26.

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