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Cheaper Phones Will Be Harder to Find This Year and in 2027, Analysts Warn

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Budget-conscious phone shoppers could be in for a struggle, and they have AI to thank for it. With memory costs continuing to rise, there could be 22% fewer phones under $400 on the market for the rest of this year and into 2027, according to a new report on Tuesday from technology research and advisory group Omdia.

While premium phones such as the iPhone 17 Pro Max and Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra, priced well above $1,000, continue to push the envelope of affordability, consumers with tighter wallets willing to forgo fancy features opt for cheaper phones. But if makers of these under-$400 devices are driven out the market, phone buyers with the least economic cushion could be hardest hit.

Analyst Zaker Li said that for phones in that price range, memory manufacturing costs have nearly doubled between the third quarter of 2025 and the first quarter of 2026. For phones above $400, memory costs have increased by more than 100%, according to Omdia's Quarterly Smartphone Technology Trends report.

Li said that some companies are trying to offset the increased memory expense by cutting costs on other components, such as screens, sensors and radio frequency modules, which aren't in short supply.

But Li said there is not a lot of wiggle room to keep phones as cheap as they have been with the rapidly increasing cost of memory.

As Chinese phone-makers such as Oppo, Vivo, Honor, Xiaomi and Transsion are forced to raise phone prices, cost-conscious consumers will stop buying them, Li said. As demand continues to decline due to higher prices, companies could stop producing low-end phones, Li predicts.

The gloomy analysis jibes with what CNET mobile managing editor David Lumb learned at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in March: The rapid building out of AI infrastructure is using up memory, with a lot of RAM needed to power AI systems. It's caused a global RAM shortage that is leading to higher prices for phones, and also the possibility that companies won't make cheaper phones, since it won't be worth it.

"Some vendors are telling us that they are considering leaving that [budget] segment entirely, because if you sell a phone for $150, and half the cost is memory, where will you make money? There's no point in selling products, right?" Francisco Jeronimo, vice president for Worldwide Client Devices at IDC, told Lumb at MWC.

Whereas AI needs a lot of RAM for its countless processes, phones use it for storage and to keep multiple apps open at the same time.

The outlook for low-budget phones

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