
Samsung has raised US prices on several Samsung Galaxy devices, with increases reaching as high as $80 depending on the model and storage tier.
The adjustments reportedly affect foldables, standard smartphones, and tablets. Entry-level configurations are generally staying at the same price, while higher-capacity variants are seeing the bigger jumps.
Among the examples cited, the Galaxy Z Flip 7 in the 512GB version has moved from $1,219.99 to $1,299.99. The Galaxy S25 FE with 256GB storage has also gone up, rising from $709.99 to $749.99.
Samsung’s tablet lineup is seeing sharper changes in some cases. The Galaxy Tab S11 128GB model is listed at $899.99 instead of $799.99, while the Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra 256GB version has shifted from $1,199.99 to $1,299.99. Even the Galaxy Tab A11 Plus has reportedly climbed from $249.99 to $299.99.
The broader explanation appears to be supply-side pressure. Industry watchers cited in the report point to rising RAM and NAND prices, which are pushing hardware costs higher across the consumer electronics market.
That context makes the move look less like a one-off pricing decision and more like part of a wider cost reset. Samsung had already increased prices on some Galaxy Book 6 laptops in the US, and Microsoft also recently raised pricing on devices like the Surface Pro and Surface Laptop. Taken together, these changes suggest component costs are still feeding directly into retail pricing for major brands.