Apple has announced significant price increases for several of its MacBook and iPad models, representing the company’s first formal step to pass rising memory and storage costs onto consumers. This decision comes in the wake of CEO Tim Cook’s acknowledgment that such increases have become necessary. On the day of the announcement, Apple shares plummeted by 5%.
The newly updated prices are as follows:
- MacBook Neo: from $599 to $699
- MacBook Air (512GB): from $1,099 to $1,299
- MacBook Pro (1TB): from $1,699 to $1,999
- iPad Air (128GB): from $599 to $749
- iPad Pro (WiFi, 256GB): from $999 to $1,199
Additionally, Apple’s online store experienced a brief downtime as it updated to reflect these new prices. In a statement, the company addressed the broader challenges facing the consumer electronics sector, highlighting a substantial increase in demand for memory and storage due to the rapid growth of AI data centers. “We have never seen a component price increase this much, this quickly,” Apple stated, emphasizing the need to adjust pricing across various products.
Cook had shared insights with The Wall Street Journal, indicating that Apple could no longer absorb rising component costs driven by the AI boom. He characterized the situation as a “hundred-year flood,” indicating the severity of the market conditions. According to Counterpoint Research, memory and storage prices have skyrocketed, allegedly quadrupling over the past three quarters as manufacturers shift focus toward high-bandwidth memory extensively used in AI servers.
As suppliers like Micron report significant revenue surges, with gross margins rising dramatically, Apple’s historical pricing strategies may evolve in response. The company typically opts to phase out lower-cost options or promote higher-storage or memory configurations. Earlier this year, for example, Apple removed the least expensive Mac mini model from its lineup.
Tarun Pathak, a research director at Counterpoint Research, estimates that the increased cost of components could add an approximate $200 to the price of each iPhone. He anticipates that similar price increases will appear across the board, particularly impacting higher-memory configurations.
In tandem with the rising costs, the push for AI integration offers Apple an opportunity to justify higher price points by highlighting the benefits of more powerful hardware. The upcoming iPhone models are expected to feature increased RAM, allowing access to advanced AI capabilities such as an updated Siri experience, which will be limited to newer devices. IDC forecasts that around 54% of iPhones sold since 2022 will not support this enhanced Siri experience.
Overall, experts predict an average selling price increase of about 12% for Apple products this year, attributing this rise to a richer product mix and anticipated innovations such as a foldable iPhone. As Apple communicates these changes, it positions them not just as a response to component inflation, but as a path toward offering enriched, capable hardware to consumers.



