RAM price tracking 2026: Daily lowest price on DDR5 and DDR4 memory of all capacities — here are the best deals during the AI-driven pricing crisis

RAM Price Index by Series

RAM Price Index 2026

(Image credit: Future)

1. Cheapest DDR5
2. Cheapest DDR4

In today's market, memory has become one of the most critical and expensive components in any build, and prices have only worsened thanks to the ongoing global DRAM shortage. Memory pricing is much more volatile now than before the shortage, so price tags fluctuate significantly from hour to hour, and it's becoming increasingly complex to tell when you're getting a fair deal versus overpaying for the same memory kit. We've compiled this comprehensive RAM price tracker that monitors the availability and pricing of different DDR5 and DDR4 memory kits across major U.S. Retailers. Our goal is to take the guesswork out of memory shopping and help you make an informed purchasing decision.

The general availability of many memory kits is limited, with truly exceptional deals scarce and often selling out within seconds of appearing. High-capacity kits, particularly DDR5, frequently show the most severe stock shortages and price premiums. Therefore, timing and vigilance are especially important when shopping for memory in current times. Whether you're budget-conscious and want the best bang for your buck, or you're building a premium system and want the best RAM for gaming available, our index gives you the data you need to make the right purchase.

You can also check out our list of the best RAM and our RAM benchmark hierarchy to see evergreen performance data to help you make an informed decision when choosing a new GPU for your system.

Lowest DDR5 Memory Kit Prices

DDR5 memory prices have exploded over the last trimester, with triple and, in some cases, quadruple increases. For instance, a conventional 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5 memory kit sold for around $100 to $200 in October 2025, but the same kit now starts at $350, if it's even in stock.

Retailers are taking advantage of the DRAM shortage, just as they did with the graphics card shortage a few years ago. They've started raising DDR5 prices to align with current market conditions and sometimes bundle DDR5 memory kits with processor or motherboard purchases.

Nonetheless, these DDR5 memory kits sometimes sell for more reasonable prices. However, you have to be quick to pull the trigger as scalpers and automated shopping bots tend to gobble up what little stock is left.

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Memory Kit

Best U.S. Price

Lowest-Ever U.S. Price

Crucial DDR5-5600 C46 16GB

$138

$43

Patriot Viper Venom DDR5-6000 C36 16GB

$199

$44

Crucial Pro DDR5-6000 C36 32GB

$325

$76

Crucial Pro DDR5-6400 C32 32GB

$348

$174

Crucial Pro DDR5-6000 C48 48GB

$414

$112

Patriot Viper Elite 5 Ultra RGB DDR5-6000 C28 48GB

$559

$139

Crucial DDR5-4800 C40 64GB

$579

$134

Patriot Viper Venom DDR5-6000 C36 64GB

$699

$129

Crucial Pro DDR5-5600 C46 96GB

$817

$186

Crucial Pro DDR5-5600 C46 128GB

$1,219

$279

Lowest DDR4 Memory Kit Prices

The rising prices of DDR5 memory kits have forced some consumers to stick with DDR4. However, DDR4 has also seen price hikes over the last three months, though not as drastic as DDR5. We've seen the pricing double to triple.

For reference, it was common to find 32GB (2x16GB) DDR4 memory kits selling for between $60 to $90 back in October 2025. Jump to January 2026, and the same memory kit could cost anywhere between $150 and $180, so DDR4 isn't exactly a safe haven for consumers.

We've seen more reasonably priced DDR4 memory kits on the market than DDR5. Logically, it makes little sense to build a DDR4-based system now due to processor and motherboard availability. However, if you're in desperate need of a DDR4 memory upgrade, there are viable options on the market.

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Memory Kit

Best U.S. Price

Lowest-Ever U.S. Price

Crucial DDR4-2666 C19 16GB

$102

$102

Timetec Pinnacle Konduit DDR4-3200 C16 16GB

$119

$24

Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro DDR4-3600 C18 32GB

$174

$81

Crucial DDR4-3200 C22 64GB

$380

$103

If you're shopping for a processor or graphics cards, check out our CPU price index and GPU price index for a list of the lowest processor and graphics card prices today.

Zhiye Liu
News Editor, RAM Reviewer & SSD Technician
  • Arkitekt78
    The year is 2026, and we are not able to quickly produce a piece of technology that, at its core, had been around for many, many decades.

    THAT is why I'm calling shenanigans. This is 100% price fixing and artificially inflating demand.
    Reply
  • Hotrod2go
    What a scam this market is now, its like this hardware, especially DDR5 has appreciated in value more than spot gold price since DDR5 came to desktop PCs!
    Reply
  • WebBeachBoy
    Well - I can tell you that here in Europe RAM prices have hit the floor. (E.g. DDR4 4GB modules for €1, 8GB for €5 )
    Reply
  • TridentForU
    Acting like this is AIs fault is wild. This is stuff we have been perfecting for over 3 decades. The manufacturers swapped consumer to enterprise lines because we don't have enough production.

    We have known years in advance this production shortage was coming. AI is overall a very small volume of the memory required in the enterprise space, even counting VRAM.

    You are deluding yourself if you think this is the fault of a single technology. This is the fault of manufacturers wanting more money.
    Reply
  • timsSOFTWARE
    TridentForU said:
    Acting like this is AIs fault is wild. This is stuff we have been perfecting for over 3 decades. The manufacturers swapped consumer to enterprise lines because we don't have enough production.

    We have known years in advance this production shortage was coming. AI is overall a very small volume of the memory required in the enterprise space, even counting VRAM.

    You are deluding yourself if you think this is the fault of a single technology. This is the fault of manufacturers wanting more money.
    AI is especially memory-hungry. It can make use of terabytes if you have it. So with new memory fabs taking the better part of a decade to go from planning stages to up and running, it does make sense that perhaps the industry was not properly positioned for it - even if they might have known it was coming for a few years.

    When memory wasn't so expensive, I always liked to have more than most people might think was needed in my PCs, and I thought I had enough, but I could use a terabyte or more of RAM for AI if I had it.
    Reply
  • Kindaian
    Long time ago, i took the bet and made my PC with 64GB of ram. The only thing i regret now is not having done it with 128GB...

    But I'm fine... For the next 5 years at least.
    Reply
  • rluker5
    These prices are bad, but my first 32GB kit of 4800c40 cost me over $300 in Dec 2021. And I was one of the lucky few to score a retail purchase. Prices and availability have been worse.

    And Yes, I blame AI. The first time was due to a PMIC shortage from the supply chain still being messed up post covid. This time is a silicon wide supply shortage from the unprecedented consumption from the buildout of the AI industry. If AI had a reasonable buildout these shortages and high prices would not exist.

    Not that I need any ram, I picked up a 32GB 8000c40 kit last year for $125, but this AI has about as much effect on my life as raytracing in games has. And raytracing in games has very little effect on my life because I don't use it much. Like AI when it pops up first in a search, I just scroll past it. It would be nice to have an AI blocker but big tech is being especially tricky about sneaking it in everywhere and it would probably take AI to do. It is a shame that AI is raising costs for many, just as a side effect of it being built up already.
    Reply