32GB of DDR5 now costs $375 – AI shortage continues to squeeze PC building

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Summary

DDR5 RAM prices have surged dramatically due to AI-driven demand, with 32GB kits now costing at least $375, up from under $100 a year ago, squeezing PC builders and enthusiasts.

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Cached at: 06/03/26, 03:40 PM

# 32GB of DDR5 now costs $375 minimum — AI shortage continues to squeeze PC building Source: [https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/ddr5/32gb-of-ddr5-now-costs-usd375-minimum-ai-shortage-continues-to-squeeze-pc-building](https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/ddr5/32gb-of-ddr5-now-costs-usd375-minimum-ai-shortage-continues-to-squeeze-pc-building) ![Corsair Vengeance DDR5](https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/G4YHFng8EzKzoEAcjKCD8k.jpg)\(Image credit: Corsair\) As the demands of AI continue to consume manufacturing capacity at every level of the PC hardware supply chain, 32GB of DDR5 RAM — broadly understood to be the sweet spot for gaming PCs and enthusiast builds — can no longer be found for less than $375\. Well, $374\.97 to be precise\. [RAM price tracking](https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/ram/ram-price-index-2026-lowest-price-on-ddr5-and-ddr4-memory-of-all-capacities)through 2026 will show you that kits that routinely cost less than $100 just a year ago are now fetching upwards of $240 \(16GB\)\. As the AI frenzy has taken hold, retailers far and wide have been pumping up their RAM prices to exorbitant levels\. However, there's so much fluctuation and noise that average pricing is now something of a ludicrous fugazi\. The*going*rate for 32GB of DDR5 RAM — the cheapest you can expect to pay — has hovered around $320 for some time, climbing past $350 in recent weeks\. Price tracking courtesy of PCPartPicker now reveals the cheapest 32GB DDR5 RAM you can buy is $375\. Specifically, four XPOWER kits from Silicon Power will set you back $374\.97 thanks to a promo code\. You can see the listings yourself below\. - [Silicon Power Zenith Gaming DDR5 6000MT/s \(PC5\-48000\) CL36 32GB\(2x16GB\)](https://sp-siliconpower.com/products/silicon-power-zenith-gaming-ddr5-6000mt-s-pc5-48000-cl36-32gb2x16gb-amd-expo-intel-xmp-3-0-dual-pack-1-35v-desktop-unbuffered-dimm) - [Silicon Power Zenith RGB DDR5 6000MT/s \(PC5\-48000\) CL36 32GB\(2x16GB\)](https://sp-siliconpower.com/products/silicon-power-zenith-rgb-ddr5-6000mt-s-pc5-48000-cl36-32gb2x16gb-amd-expo-intel-xmp-3-0-dual-pack-1-35v-desktop-unbuffered-dimm) - [Silicon Power Pulse Gaming DDR5 6000MT/s \(PC5\-48000\) CL36 32GB\(2x16GB\)](https://sp-siliconpower.com/products/silicon-power-pulse-gaming-ddr5-6000mt-s-pc5-48000-cl36-32gb2x16gb-dual-pack-1-35v-desktop-unbuffered-dimm) - [Silicon Power Zenith RGB DDR5 6000MT/s \(PC5\-48000\) CL36 32GB\(2x16GB\)](https://sp-siliconpower.com/products/silicon-power-zenith-rgb-ddr5-6000mt-s-pc5-48000-cl36-32gb2x16gb-amd-expo-intel-xmp-3-0-dual-pack-1-35v-desktop-unbuffered-dimm) As you can imagine, this is enormous pricing pressure for enthusiasts trying to build gaming PCs or upgrade their rigs in 2026\. A component that once cost less than $100 and was something of an afterthought now costs almost four times as much, and that's before you've even fired a neuron in consideration of aesthetics, timings, or brand\. More popular kits from the likes of Corsair and Crucial, or RGB offerings to match the rest of your build, will easily set you back more than $400\. Of course, 32GB is really the minimum sweet spot you should be aiming for when building a PC in 2026\. If you did want more capacity, 64GB will set you back an astonishing $679\.99\. 16GB of RAM as a compromise can be found for[$200 at B&H Photo](https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1705006-REG/patriot_pvv516g560c40k_patriot_viper_venom_ddr5.html/BI/19488/KBID/11704?BI=20811&KBID=16572&SID=tomshardware-us-9070241322475518359), but with[SK hynix warning that manufacturing constraints will persist through 2030](https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/dram/sk-group-chairman-says-memory-chip-shortage-will-last-until-2030), there's no sign of prices letting up so that you can upgrade capacity any time soon\. The humble[RAM combo deals](https://www.tomshardware.com/desktops/gaming-pcs/best-ram-combo-deals-2026-make-pc-builds-and-upgrades-more-affordable-with-the-best-ram-bundle-deals-available)we've been highlighting in recent months are a small source of solace for builders, letting you score RAM for less than the $375 going rate if you pair it with a decent motherboard, a processor, or even an entire set of PC components\. A theme of ongoing[Computex 2026](https://www.tomshardware.com/news/live/computex-2026-)announcements remains a lack of pricing clarity on lots of PC hardware, including Nvidia's RTX Spark laptops and PCs, as well as new\-build systems and, of course, RAM components themselves\. Vendors are likely wary of scaring off potential buyers with higher\-than\-expected prices ahead of release\. Perhaps more likely, the prices haven't been set because they're still going up\. Storage isn't much better, with[SSD price tracking](https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/ssds/ssd-price-tracking-2026-lowest-price-on-every-m-2-ssd)revealing that drives which once cost as little as $38 are now fetching $200\. AMD is making a noticeable effort to keep PC gaming prices down, this week announcing the return of its[Ryzen 7 5800X3D, and the advent of a new Ryzen 7 7700X3D](https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/amds-legacy-ryzen-7-5800x3d-chips-now-sell-for-up-to-usd800-more-than-a-new-9800x3d-am4-chip-costs-twice-as-much-as-msrp-as-enthusiasts-flock-to-old-ddr4-memory)\. Intel, which[warned this week that "something has to give"](https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/intel-says-something-has-to-give-with-memory-prices-company-says-it-will-continue-to-make-sure-that-there-are-products-which-can-take-care-of-older-memory-technologies)when it comes to memory prices, also teased dragging out some of its legacy products to give users more options on older memory technologies, namely Raptor Lake and DDR4\. Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in\-depth reviews, straight to your inbox\. Stephen is Tom's Hardware's News Editor with almost a decade of industry experience covering technology, having worked at TechRadar, iMore, and even Apple over the years\. He has covered the world of consumer tech from nearly every angle, including supply chain rumors, patents, and litigation, and more\. When he's not at work, he loves reading about history and playing video games\.

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