Microsoft will implement a major round of price increases for its Xbox Series X and Series S hardware beginning August 1, driving up retail costs by as much as $150. In a stark departure from traditional console cycles—where hardware typically depreciates over time—soaring manufacturing costs have instead forced Microsoft to adjust its pricing upward for the second time in less than a year. The upcoming changes will see the 512 GB Xbox models increase by $100, while the 1 TB variations face a $150 premium, alongside plans to entirely phase out the 2 TB tier.
Under the revised August pricing structure, the flagship Xbox Series X 1TB with a disc drive will climb to $799.99, while its digital-only counterpart will retail for $749.99. The entry-level Series S will see its 512GB model rise to $499.99, with the 1TB edition landing at $599.99. According to Microsoft, the decision stems from a drastic 2.5x spike in the cost of memory and storage component manufacturing. This disruption is heavily driven by the broader tech industry’s massive pivot toward artificial intelligence, which has created an unprecedented global demand for RAM and drastically strained the supply chain for consumer electronics.
The economic pressure is not isolated to Microsoft. The entire hardware landscape has faced similar inflation, with Sony previously adjusting PlayStation 5 pricing, Nintendo establishing higher baseline costs for its upcoming Switch successor, and Apple raising prices across its iPad and MacBook lineups. Microsoft anticipates that memory component costs could double yet again by the fall of 2026, signaling that high manufacturing overhead is becoming a long-term reality for the industry rather than a temporary hurdle.
To mitigate potential consumer pushback and keep hardware accessible, Xbox is introducing flexible purchasing options, including specialized “buy now, pay later” programs and 12-month interest-free financing through select retailers like Amazon. The pricing surge arrives during a transitional period for Xbox leadership under new boss Asha Sharma, who took over from Phil Spencer earlier this year with a mandate to boost the brand’s competitiveness through software exclusivity. However, with the company’s next-generation hardware, codenamed Project Helix, already in active development, these market conditions raise serious questions about whether the next generation of home consoles will ultimately breach the $1,000 threshold.
Source: Game Rant