High Memory Prices Put New Tablet Sales at Risk, Boosting Refurbished Market
2 Min Read May 25, 2026
Rising memory costs are pushing entry-level tablets out of reach, driving budget buyers toward older refurbished devices and creating new opportunities for low-cost designs.

Affordable tablets aren't disappearing. They're just getting older. Memory cost increases are pushing entry-level devices into higher price tiers, and budget-conscious buyers in price-sensitive markets aren't waiting around for prices to drop. They're turning to refurbished devices instead, often two or three generations old, that still cover the basics. Revenue from sub-$500 tablets is down both in absolute terms and as a share of the market. For vendors, the message is clear: there's a real opportunity in designing new devices with low component costs as a deliberate priority, not an afterthought.
This summary outlines the analysis* found on the TechInsights' Platform.
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