AI-driven RAM shortages threaten more than just the PC market — datacenters expected to consume 70% of global memory in 2026

DDR5 RAM should be treated as a retirement investment at this point.
(Image credit: Future | Edited with Gemini)

The latest hardware crisis that's driving up the prices of consumer tech is not expected to get any better any time soon, according to a new report from the Wall Street Journal (WSJ).

Memory and storage — in the forms of both solid-state drives and hard-disk drives — are experiencing a severe drought, and it's driven by the winds of what many consider to be only the initial phase of the AI revolution.

Get ready for the RAM squeeze to hit all consumer tech in 2026

Phone prices will not be unaffected by the global DRAM shortage. (Image credit: Future | Daniel Rubino)

The main argument in the WSJ report doesn't exactly center around PCs. DRAM (and NAND) chips are used in practically every digital gadget you use daily, from your phone and laptop to your TV to your car and smart home appliances.

Although AI datacenters use specialized HBM memory, it's created using the same DRAM chips that go into consumer RAM. The money is so good on the AI side that Micron announced late-2025 it was killing its consumer Crucial brand to focus entirely on supplying the AI market.

Because AI firms are crowding out other buyers of memory, unexpected consequences are likely to reverberate across countless industries. Effects could include delayed data centers, higher prices for laptops, TVs and other consumer electronics, and possible chip shortages for automakers that would delay vehicle production, in a potential repeat of the pandemic car crisis.

Christopher Mims, Wall Street Journal

Despite the world's three largest DRAM manufacturers expanding existing manufacturing facilities or planning entirely new plants — Samsung, Micron, and SK Hynix produce 90% of the world's supply — global demand will continue to severely outpace production.

The WSJ quotes Avril Wu, senior research VP at TrendForce, as suggesting that the newfound production won't make a noticeable difference in global supply until 2028. As research director MS Hwang, from Counterpoint Research, points out to WSJ, the big DRAM producers are already selling capacity for 2027 and 2028.

👉 Conspiracy theory or apt prediction? — The AI-fueled hardware shortage will kill local PCs, paving the way for subscription-based cloud computing

The report is capped off with another quote from Hwang, in which they suggest that "there is no limit" to how much manufacturers will pay for memory. Of course, that sentiment begs a different question: How much are we, the consumers, willing to pay for the tech that's become integral to our modern lives?

(via Tom's Hardware)

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Can anything stop the DRAM and NAND shortages that are threatening to drive up the prices of all consumer tech? How are you preparing for the squeeze? Let me know in the comments section below!


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Cale Hunt
Contributor

Cale Hunt brings to Windows Central more than nine years of experience writing about laptops, PCs, accessories, games, and beyond. If it runs Windows or in some way complements the hardware, there’s a good chance he knows about it, has written about it, or is already busy testing it.

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