Is RAM the new Bitcoin? DDR4 memory prices are rising so fast, some tracker graphs are running out of space - and I fear 2026 could well see a 10x price rise

Maingear BYO RAM scheme showing RAM sticks on a desk
(Image credit: Maingear)

  • RAM prices are skyrocketing after a long period of relative stability
  • DDR4 64GB kits have climbed from near $150 to around $400 to $600
  • DDR4 and DDR5 kits show massive increases across multiple capacities

RAM prices have been climbing steadily at a pace that’s becoming incredibly difficult to ignore - and while some of the blame for the spike can be laid at the door of memory giants SK Hynix, Samsung, and Micron prioritizing the needs of hyperscalers and AI firms over consumers, the situation is more complicated than that, as I wrote about recently.

If you’re hoping to build a new PC, or upgrade an existing one, you’ll need to budget a lot more for the RAM than you were likely bargaining for, especially if you need DDR4.

Memory trend charts from PCPartPicker show how much has changed in a relatively short time. For much of 2025, DDR4 pricing was largely stable. A typical 32GB DDR4 kit typically hovered around $70 to $90, depending on speed and brand.

DDR4 RAM prices

(Image credit: PCPartPicker)

Sky high prices

Fast forward to today, and recent tracker data shows many 2x16GB DDR4 kits now pushing past $150, with higher priced listings edging toward or above $200.

The shift is far more pronounced at higher capacities. DDR4 2x32GB kits that spent much of the timeline averaging around $120 to $150 have climbed dramatically, with current averages moving into the $350 to $400 range.

Individual listings at the top end are now close to $600.

Those increases are large enough that older price history is being visually compressed on some of PCPartPicker's graphs.

Long flat stretches of relatively stable pricing have been squeezed to accommodate the rapid rise near the right edge.

DDR5 pricing is also moving higher, although that curve appears slightly less abrupt.

Kits that previously averaged around $150 are now more commonly tracked in the $250 to $300 range.

This ongoing pricing increase will inevitably alter how memory fits into overall system budgets for many builders. RAM is no longer a predictable purchase that can be treated as a minor line item.

If the current direction holds, memory could soon rival CPUs and GPUs as one of the largest single costs in a build. That would have been difficult to imagine this time a year ago.

Not all memory related components are being affected in the same way. NAND based storage pricing shows far less movement – for now at least.


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Wayne Williams
Editor

Wayne Williams is a freelancer writing news for TechRadar Pro. He has been writing about computers, technology, and the web for 30 years. In that time he wrote for most of the UK’s PC magazines, and launched, edited and published a number of them too.

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