TL; DR
- Micron is exiting the consumer memory market and discontinuing Crucial RAM, SSDs, and storage products.
- The company is shifting production toward higher-margin AI and data-center memory like HBM.
- Supply is tightening across the industry, with Apple reportedly accepting a 100% RAM price increase from Samsung during recent negotiations.
Micron has confirmed it will exit the consumer memory segment, a move that effectively ends products under the Crucial brand. The company shared the decision in December 2025, explaining that it will gradually wind down consumer RAM, SSDs, and memory card products through early 2026.
According to several reports, Micron wants to redirect manufacturing capacity toward more profitable enterprise segments such as AI infrastructure and data-center hardware. These areas currently command significantly higher margins compared to consumer storage and memory.
Crucial has been one of the most recognizable names for PC upgrades for years, especially for desktop RAM and SSDs. With Micron stepping away, the consumer side of the market loses one of its biggest direct suppliers.
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AI Demand Is Pulling Memory Supply Away From Consumers

AI systems require enormous amounts of advanced memory, especially high-bandwidth memory used in AI accelerators and servers. Because only a few companies can produce these chips at scale, suppliers are prioritizing those customers over lower-margin consumer hardware.
The global DRAM market is highly concentrated. Samsung, SK hynix, and Micron together control roughly 90%+ of supply. When one of them shifts capacity away from consumer products, availability tightens quickly. That is already affecting pricing and supply across smartphones, PCs, and other consumer electronics.
Apple’s Recent Deal With Samsung Shows How Tight Things Are

Recent negotiations between Apple and Samsung highlight how severe the situation is. Samsung reportedly opened negotiations for LPDDR5X memory with a 100% price increase. The expectation internally was that Apple would negotiate the figure down to around 60%.
Instead, Apple accepted the full increase immediately. The cost of a 12GB module reportedly jumped from roughly $30 to about $70. Apple is expected to source around 60 to 70% of its iPhone memory from Samsung, which leaves limited room to push back when supply is tight.
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AI is Eating All Our Memory
Micron’s exit from the consumer segment adds pressure to a market that was already tightening. With one of the three major DRAM players (Samsung, SK Hynix, Micron) moving production elsewhere, manufacturers that still serve consumer electronics gain more leverage.
The immediate effects are already visible in pricing negotiations and supply planning across the smartphone and PC industries with insane price hikes. If the AI bubble continues growing at the current pace, the memory market could remain constrained for several years.

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