Samsung just made the Galaxy Z Fold 7 more expensive, quietly
Samsung has increased the price of higher-capacity Galaxy Z Fold 7 models by $80.
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What you need to know
- Samsung has increased prices of Galaxy Z Fold 7 higher storage variants in the U.S. without any announcement.
- The 512GB and 1TB models now cost $80 more, while the base 256GB variant remains unchanged.
- The price hike reflects rising component and memory costs that brands are no longer fully absorbing.
We're starting to see brands no longer absorb rising component costs, and it looks like Samsung has begun passing some of that onto consumers, starting with select Galaxy Z Fold 7 models in the U.S.
It's been a while since Samsung launched the Galaxy Z Fold 7, and it wasn't cheap to begin with. The base 256GB model starts at $2,000 in the U.S., while the 512GB variant launched at $2,119 and the 1TB model at $2,419.
However, it now looks like Samsung has quietly increased the prices of the 512GB and 1TB variants in the U.S. As spotted by 9to5Google, both models have gone up by $80 without any changes to the hardware or an official announcement.
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This brings the 512GB variant to $2,200 and the 1TB model to $2,500. While an $80 bump might not seem like much for a phone in this price range, it does signal that Samsung is no longer absorbing rising costs and is starting to pass them on to buyers. The base 256GB model, however, remains unchanged at $2,000.
This feels like Samsung testing the waters. An $80 bump on already expensive variants might not sting immediately, but it sets a precedent. I wouldn't be surprised if this trickles down to more devices soon.
Samsung hasn't officially explained the price hike, but the reasons are fairly clear. Component costs, including memory, have been rising, and there's only so much of that companies can absorb. We've already seen the base Galaxy S26 launch at $100 more than its predecessor, and this seems to be part of the same trend.
Other smartphone brands are expected to follow a similar path this year. Nothing's CEO recently suggested that entry-level Android phones could be hit even harder by rising costs.
For now, Samsung hasn't increased prices across its entire lineup, but it wouldn't be surprising if more changes follow.
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Sanuj is a tech writer who loves exploring smartphones, tablets, and wearables. He began his journey with a Nokia Lumia and later dived deep into Android and iPhone. He's been writing about tech since 2018, with bylines at Pocketnow, Android Police, Pocket-Lint, and MakeUseOf. When he's not testing gadgets, he's either sipping chai, watching football, or playing cricket.
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