Samsung Electronics launched its Galaxy S26 smartphone lineup on Wednesday, and two of the three models now cost more than their predecessors. The price increases come as the tech industry wrestles with a memory chip shortage tied to the global AI infrastructure boom.
The Galaxy S26 starts at $899, up $100 from last year’s S25. The S26+ now opens at $1,099, also a $100 jump. The S26 Ultra holds steady at $1,299.
Samsung dropped the old $799 entry point on the base S26, eliminating the 128GB storage option entirely. All three models now ship with at least 256GB of storage and 12GB of RAM.
The phones are available for preorder as of February 25.
The S26 series is Samsung’s third generation of what it calls “AI phones,” following the S24 launch two years ago. All three models run on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip.
Samsung has built in a range of AI tools powered by Google Gemini and Perplexity. One feature, Now Nudge, reads your messages and calendar to suggest replies and flag scheduling conflicts. Another lets Gemini place a DoorDash order or book an Uber on your behalf.
The S26 Ultra adds a privacy display — described by Samsung as a world first — that controls how pixels disperse light, restricting side-angle visibility.
Gartner analyst Tuong Nguyen noted that while AI features are increasingly expected, hardware remains the primary reason most people upgrade.
The price increases don’t exist in a vacuum. Memory prices in smartphone segments have doubled over the past two quarters, according to CSS Insight research.
The shortage stems from AI data center expansion pulling supply away from consumer electronics. Counterpoint Research forecast in December that average smartphone selling prices would rise 6.9% in 2026 as a result.
Paolo Pescatore, TMT analyst at PP Foresight, said the memory crunch is no longer a niche supply-chain conversation but a “strategic constraint on the AI roadmap.”
Samsung president Wonjin Lee flagged the supply chain risks in a Bloomberg interview in January, warning that memory chip constraints could push prices higher across product lines.
The S26 Ultra features a 6.9-inch display and an additional 10x telephoto camera not found on the base models, with an option to upgrade to 16GB of RAM.
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