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Home Gaming

Xbox’s next era may start with a painful question about console prices

June 11, 2026
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Xbox is putting unusual pressure on its own console business, and a new Xbox Wire post gives players a clear reason to watch for an Xbox price hike.

Microsoft says storage and memory prices are climbing fast, while Xbox can’t currently make as many consoles as players want to buy. It also says the business needs a new hardware model and new partnerships as it remains committed to Helix.

Microsoft hasn’t announced a price increase. Still, the post lays out a cost problem that can eventually reach shoppers, especially when supply is already tight and the company is questioning the old console model.

Why is Xbox hardware under pressure

“While the entire industry is facing a components crisis, we believe we have been impacted more greatly than many of our peers due to the choices we made over the last half decade,” says the post. The price it paid for console storage parts was already more than twice as high in February as it was last fall. Those costs have doubled again since then, and planning for the 2027 holiday season points to another major increase.

Xbox Microsoft

Storage isn’t the only problem. Microsoft says memory costs are following a similar path, and the broader industry is dealing with a component crunch.

What could change for buyers

Higher console prices are only one possible outcome. Microsoft could also reduce subsidies, change storage options, adjust bundles, lean on partner-built hardware, or push more players toward PC, mobile, and streaming.

The subsidy line adds pressure to that list. Xbox says that, excluding Activision Blizzard King, it spent more than $20 billion over five years on content, platform work, and hardware subsidy, while annual revenue declined by nearly half a billion dollars over the same period. That makes aggressive console pricing harder to defend.

Xbox Controller with Xbox Logo in background
Ny Zoltán / Pexels

When should buyers pay attention

The 2027 holiday season is the clearest timing marker in the Xbox Wire post, but Microsoft doesn’t name specific products, prices, regions, or launch plans. It also says it’ll look at partnerships and possible M&A to improve its position across hardware, PC, mobile, and streaming.

For now, buyers should treat this as an early warning, not confirmation. An Xbox price hike isn’t official, but with storage costs potentially rising far beyond 2024 levels and supply already tight, anyone planning a console upgrade should watch for pricing, bundle, and availability changes before the next major Xbox hardware push.

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