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How Samsung’s latest RAM decision will hurt budget Android phones

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Why This Matters

Samsung's decision to phase out LPDDR4 and 4X RAM chips, crucial for budget smartphones, threatens to increase costs and reduce availability for affordable devices. This shift could lead to higher prices and limited options for consumers seeking budget-friendly smartphones, potentially impacting the accessibility of affordable technology. The move underscores ongoing supply chain challenges and the industry's push toward newer, higher-margin memory solutions.

Key Takeaways

Ryan Haines / Android Authority

The RAM crisis gripping tech markets shows no signs of easing — and in some cases, it may get worse. Demand from AI datacenters isn’t slowing down, and Samsung Electronics has just taken its last orders for budget smartphone memory: LPDDR4 and 4X RAM chips that, despite their age, still underpin a good portion of affordable devices. As one of the few major players in the memory space, Samsung’s decision to push LPDDR4 toward the end of life to free up capacity for newer, higher-margin memory is a double-edged sword.

For context, most — but certainly not all — smartphones have moved to LPDDR5 and 5X, including relatively affordable models like Samsung’s Galaxy A37. But there are still plenty of exceptions. The low-cost Nothing Phone 4a is a recent example of a device sticking with older memory, and some budget chipsets — including Samsung’s own Exynos line — continue to support it.

Last orders on affordable RAM are bad news for budget handsets.

LPDDR4 may not be cutting-edge, but it remains widely used, particularly at the lowest price points. And that’s exactly where the current crunch is now biting hardest. Budget devices are more exposed than flagships, simply because they have far less room to absorb rising component costs.

According to Counterpoint, DRAM’s share of bill-of-materials (BOM) costs in affordable (sub-$200) and mid-tier ($400–$600) smartphones has surged over the past year. At the low end, phones using LPDDR4X — the very memory Samsung is phasing out — have seen BOM share jump from around 13% to 26% between Q1 2025 and Q1 2026, with projections hitting an unsustainable 35% in Q2. A major supplier taking last orders will only tighten supply further and push costs even higher.

Tushar Mehta / Android Authority

That leaves budget handset makers with few good options. Raising prices is the obvious move, but it undermines the entire value proposition and risks pushing these devices into direct competition with better-equipped mid-range phones.

Cutting specifications isn’t much more appealing. There’s little slack left to trim: weaker processors, lower-end cameras, or even tighter memory configurations might be on the table in some cases, but each comes at the cost of a noticeably worse user experience. For consumers shopping on a budget, that means paying more for less — or settling for devices that feel increasingly compromised. There are no easy wins here.

Flagship phones aren’t safe either

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