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Smartphone market set for biggest-ever decline in 2026 on memory price surge, IDC says

By Thomson Reuters Feb 26, 2026 | 1:08 PM

Feb 26 (Reuters) – The global smartphone market is poised to suffer its biggest decline ever in 2026, sinking to a more than decade low in shipments, ​as surging memory chip prices drive up device costs, ‌the International Data Corporation said on Thursday.

Smartphone shipments are expected to drop 12.9% to 1.12 billion units, the research firm said in a report.

The decline will hit low-end Android manufacturers the hardest, while Apple ‌and ​Samsung are positioned to gain market share ⁠as smaller rivals struggle ⁠or exit the market entirely, the report said.

“What we are witnessing is not a temporary squeeze, but a tsunami-like shock originating in the memory supply chain,” said Francisco ​Jeronimo, vice president for Worldwide Client Devices at IDC.

Analysts have said rising component costs will erode margins at smartphone ⁠companies focused on budget devices, forcing ⁠them to pass on the expenses to consumers ​at a time when demand at higher price points is ​weakening.

Apple and Samsung, with stronger balance sheets and premium ‌positioning, are better equipped to weather the crisis, IDC said.

The average selling price of smartphones is projected to surge 14% to a record $523 this year, as manufacturers shift toward higher-margin ⁠models to offset ballooning costs.

IDC expects a modest 2% recovery in 2027 as the crisis eases, followed by a 5.2% rebound in ⁠2028, though it ‌said that the market was unlikely to ⁠return to previous norms.

“The memory crisis will ​cause more ‌than a temporary decline; it marks a ​structural reset ⁠of the entire market,” said Nabila Popal, senior research director at IDC’s Mobile Phone Tracker.

She warned that the sub-$100 smartphone segment, representing 171 million devices, will become “permanently uneconomical” even after memory prices stabilize by mid-2027.

(Reporting by Kritika Lamba in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Shinjini Ganguli)