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iPhone 18 Pro Max Component Costs Could Rise Nearly $300

The bill of materials for the iPhone 18 Pro Max is expected to rise by nearly $300 compared to the iPhone 17 Pro Max, according to a new Counterpoint Research analysis.

iPhone 18 Pro Deep Red Feature
The estimate covers the 1TB storage model. NAND flash costs for the device are said to exceed $250 on their own, a figure that would cover roughly half of the ‌iPhone 17 Pro‌ Max's entire estimated component cost. DRAM pricing is also climbing sharply, with both components facing pressure from a broader memory chip shortage tied to surging demand for AI hardware.

Apple's expected shift to a 2nm chip is described as the second-largest contributor to the cost increase. The ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ is rumored to debut the A20 Pro, manufactured on TSMC's N2 process, which reportedly carries a steep premium in wafer pricing over the current N3P node used for the A19 Pro. Early yield ramp costs on a new process node typically add to per-unit chip pricing as well.

Counterpoint says display costs and other miscellaneous components may actually decline compared to the ‌iPhone 17 Pro‌ Max, partially offsetting the memory and chip increases. Camera costs are expected to rise slightly, which the firm attributes to new technology, likely a reference to the variable-aperture main camera rumored for the Pro models.

iphone 18 pro max counterpoint bom

The report arrives weeks after Apple raised prices on 14 products, including every Mac and iPad, along with the Apple TV, HomePod, HomePod mini, and Vision Pro. Apple attributed those increases to the same memory chip shortage cited in the Counterpoint report, saying that the "supply-demand imbalance" driven by AI data center buildouts had made further price increases necessary. iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods pricing was left unchanged in that round of hikes, but the ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ lineup is widely expected to be next.

The Wall Street Journal previously reported that the ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ could start as high as $1,399, citing estimates that Apple's DRAM cost per unit could climb from $39 to $145 and its flash storage cost from $13 to $51. Apple CEO Tim Cook told the outlet that the company is "still working through" which devices will see price increases. Separately, IDC has estimated a $200 increase to the Pro and Pro Max models specifically, while Weibo leakers have separately suggested Apple could raise its Chinese starting price for the lineup by around 11%.

To manage the higher costs without giving up margin entirely, Apple is expected to apply different retail price increases across storage tiers rather than a flat increase across the lineup, concentrating the impact on higher-capacity models. Even with an average $200 retail price rise, Counterpoint still expects the ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ Max to land at a slightly lower gross margin than the ‌iPhone 17 Pro‌ Max achieved in 2025.

The ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ and ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ Max are expected to launch alongside Apple's first foldable iPhone in the fall.

Related Roundup: iPhone 18 Pro

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Top Rated Comments

3 hours ago at 08:00 am
That analysis seems wrong. A single 1TB NAND chip is nowhere near $250 in the quantities Apple buys.

At the retail level, a 1TB 2230 NVMe SSD is less than $200, and that is retail pricing, and includes a circuit board, controller, and a bunch of overhead for manufacturing, packaging and distribution. The chip itself in quantities that Apple would buy is nowhere near $250.

I think we are being misled or Apple needs better buyers.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
turbineseaplane Avatar
3 hours ago at 07:56 am

With the iPhone Ultra, we'll probably see the first $3k iPhone.
I know everyone thinks "people will just buy iPhones...because", but I really think this assumption could get seriously tested moving forward.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Royksöpp Avatar
3 hours ago at 07:56 am
I can take a 100 price increase, but anything more will make me reconsider upgrading.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
jarman92 Avatar
3 hours ago at 07:39 am
Why would they analyze only the highest-end (1TB) model that almost nobody buys? 🤨
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
3 hours ago at 07:50 am
Shall we go down memory lane?


Disproportionate Markups on the Consumer:

Micron's leadership took direct aim at how Apple passes costs to consumers. Executives pointed out that while memory prices have indeed risen due to the AI infrastructure boom, Apple is disproportionately multiplying that cost. As one executive noted, if a chip price moves up slightly, Apple uses that as justification to mark up retail prices by hundreds of dollars to protect its own high margins.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
3 hours ago at 07:40 am
We get it…the new one is going to be EXPENSIVE!
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)

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