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Samsung has raised the price of the Galaxy Z Fold 7 1TB to $2,499.99 from $2,419.99 in the U.S., an $80 jump (h/t 9To5Google) . The 512GB model has also gone up by $80 to $2,199.99, while the entry-level 256GB remains at $1,999.99.
U.S. Galaxy Z Fold shoppers aren’t the only ones who have been stung by higher prices. In Korea, the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Galaxy Z Flip 7 have gone up in price, while the Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge is set to be more expensive according to Korean publication Newsway.

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 just went up in price. It now costs more than when it launched last year. (Photo by Future Publishing via Getty Images)
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These price hikes aren’t a result of a bundle deal, or some other freebie or upgrade. It looks like Samsung has just upped the price of its foldable range as it grapples with rising memory costs. The Korean company has been open about the “inevitable” price rises for its smartphones.
Speaking to Reuters at CES 2026 ahead of the Galaxy S26 launch, Samsung Electronics co-CEO TM Roh said that "no company is immune" to the pressure of the global memory shortage and subsequent skyrocketing prices, including Samsung’s smartphone business. At the time, Roh didn’t rule out raising product prices, going as far as to say that it was “inevitable.”
That forewarning came to pass, with the Galaxy S26 launching at a higher price than its predecessor in select markets. The recently released Galaxy A57 also saw a price increase. Now, it looks like Samsung is revising prices for already released units, which could spell bad news for the other Galaxy phones in its lineup, including the Galaxy S26 series. The new Galaxy Z Fold 7 price bucks a years-long trend.
What a difference a year makes. Last May, Samsung slashed the price of the Galaxy Z Fold 6 (its then flagship foldable) by $350, bringing the price down to $1,699.99. A year later and the Galaxy Z Fold 7 actually costs more than when it was released eight months ago.
Smartphones going up in price so late into their lifecycle is very rare. Unheard of, even. While the tech world usually expects prices to drop over time, Samsung is currently defying the laws of tech depreciation.
Data from smartphone resale comparison site SellCell shows that Samsung phones typically lose half their value within the first year. For example; the Galaxy S23 series lost 49.7% of its value at six months and 55.5% at 12 months. While the Galaxy S24 series lost 47.3% of its value at six months and 49.3% at 12 months.
Update April 12th 15:53 PM: Prices aren’t just going up in the U.S. and Korea; India has also seen repeated price hikes for Samsung Galaxy phones. Spotted by SamMobile, Samsung has implemented four price hikes for select phones in 2026 already.
Unlike in the U.S., these jumps have hit the mid-range handsets particularly hard. Upcoming pricing details, which appear to be from an official retail list, were shared by Abhishek Yadav on X and show that Samsung is planning to raise the retail cost for several A-series phones by between INR 500 ($6) to INR 3,500 ($38). It may not seem like much, but this is the fifth price hike for select Galaxy phones in India since January.
Samsung also raised the price of the Galaxy A57 when it launched in the U.S. this month, moving the entry point to $549.99 compared to the $499.99 launch price of last year's Galaxy A56. While the price rises buck a long-held trend of hardware getting cheaper as time goes on, there was an early warning that this could happen to the A-series before the Galaxy S26 launched in February.
Reports from Korean publications iNews24 and Maeil Business suggested at the time that Samsung would cut back on marketing spend or raise the cost of the Galaxy A-series to keep Galaxy S26 prices flat. That appears to have borne out, with the Galaxy S26 Ultra price frozen at $1,299 in the U.S., while several A-series phones have seen repeated price hikes to absorb the rising costs of memory.
If you were holding out for a better Galaxy Z Fold 7 deal and this price rise shocked you, there are other options. Amazon is still selling the Galaxy Z Fold 7 512GB at its original launch price and it has discounted the 256GB model by $100. It’s not the $350 deal we saw for the Galaxy Z Fold 6 last May, but it’s one of the better deals around right now. The downside of buying from Amazon, though, is its poor trade-in prices.
For example, Amazon will pay $260 for a Galaxy S23 Ultra (a realistic trade-in) compared to Samsung’s $390 valuation. That price gap is repeated across brands and devices. If you have the right phone to trade in, going with Samsung directly may still yield an overall better deal, even though the retail price has gone up.
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