What’s happened? The supply crunch in DRAM and NAND flash, originally driven by surging demand from AI datacentres, has finally hit consumer hardware hard. According to recent industry reports via TrendForce, major brands are reacting: Dell and Lenovo are reportedly preparing significant price increases across their PC and server lines to absorb soaring component costs. This comes after HP already warned of price hikes across its PC and laptop lineup, while AMD also warned about an increase in its GPU prices.
- Dell is reportedly planning a 15–20% price increase on many of its server and PC offerings as soon as mid-December.
- Lenovo has warned clients that all price quotes expire by January 1, 2026, and new systems ordered thereafter will come with higher costs.
- DRAM and NAND makers are prioritizing high-margin AI/server orders over consumer PCs, shrinking supply for everyday desktops and laptops.
Why this is important: This isn’t just business-speak or server-market chaos this affects your wallet. If you were eyeing a new laptop, desktop, or server for end-2025 or early 2026, you may be looking at a significantly higher price tag soon. For businesses and students, this means PC upgrade cycles could get longer, resulting in fewer refreshes, tighter budgets, or settling for older hardware. And for gamers or content creators planning new builds next year, the rising cost could reshape what’s even possible within budget.

Why should I care? Price hikes like this don’t just quietly “add a little extra” to your bill; instead, they ripple through every buying decision you’ll make in the next few months. Once OEM prices go up, retailers adjust fast, corporate discounts shrink, and even refurbished or clearance units start creeping upward. If you’re shopping for a work laptop, a study machine, or even a secondary home PC, waiting could mean paying more for the same configuration or being pushed into lower specs just to stay within budget.
Okay, so what’s next? If a new PC or laptop is even remotely on your shopping list, the clock is ticking louder than it looks. Expect retailers to quietly update prices over the next few weeks, not all at once but in sneaky little jumps. The smart move is simple: lock in your configuration sooner rather than later, especially if you want more RAM or a bigger SSD. If not, be ready to hunt for last-gen deals and clearance stock in early 2026. Either way, the “wait and see” phase just got a lot more expensive.

