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Jeff Geerling

Quickly apply LUTs (color grading) with ffmpeg Framework You can finally power on a Mac remotely I tested every IP KVM in my Homelab It's hard to justify buying a Framework 12 Tuning in FM Radio on a 3D Printer Heatbed I patched iozone for better disk benchmarks on modern macOS News about Raspberry Pi 6 and Microcontroller Development Wi-Wi Is Wireless Time Sync at 1 nanosecond Bambu Lab is abusing the open source social contract HomePod mini feels like magic, but it's just good timing SBC Clusters are a terrible value, but they're fun anyway Raspberry Pi Connect may control Windows soon New 10 GbE USB adapters are cooler, smaller, cheaper An Arm Mainboard for the Framework Laptop Build your own Dial-up ISP with a Raspberry Pi Bring back MiniDV with this Raspberry Pi FireWire HAT Using FireWire on a Raspberry Pi The best laptop Apple ever made Restoring an Xserve G5: When Apple built real servers Can the MacBook Neo replace my M4 Air? A PTP Wall Clock is impractical and a little too precise I built a pint-sized Macintosh Expert Beginners and Lone Wolves will dominate this early LLM era
DRAM pricing is killing the hobbyist SBC market
jeff@jeffgee · 2026-04-02 · via Jeff Geerling

Today Raspberry Pi announced more price increases for all Pis with LPDDR4 RAM, alongside a 'right-sized' 3GB RAM Pi 4 for $83.75.

The price increases bring the 16GB Pi 5 up to $299.99.

Despite today's date, this is not a joke.

I published a video going over the state of the hobbyist 'high end SBC' market (4/8/16 GB models in the current generation), which I'll embed below:

But if you'd like the tl;dr:

Unless the DRAM pricing situation changes radically, I think the hobbyist SBC market is dying—or at least on life support. And I don't just mean Raspberry Pis, but all SBC vendors. LPDDR chips now account for the majority of board cost from the vendors I've checked with.

Raspberry Pi 5 Price Increases since launch 2 4 and 16 GB models

Besides causing a radical reduction in new boards launched (Radxa seems to be the only vendor that had some cadence last year), the price increases for boards with greater than 4 GB of RAM have put those boards out of the reach of most hobbyists.

Even mini PCs, which for a time were a great deal, have risen to $250+ for 8 GB models. Used PC are also more expensive, especially with more than 4 GB of RAM.

I design most of my projects so they can be replicated for less than $100. Learning is easier on cheaper parts you won't fret over too much when you break them. With prices going up, this limits the types of projects I take on.

I'm working more with older SBCs and microcontrollers now, and I think that's the direction many in the hobbyist space are going.

Maybe, as Eben Upton says in Raspberry Pi's post,

memory prices won’t remain at their current very high level indefinitely; the circumstances in which we find ourselves are challenging, but in the future they will abate.

But I'm not sure how long we'll have to wait, or if a hobbyist SBC market will exist by the time the bubble bursts.

Lucky for Raspberry Pi, they have a thriving microcontroller ecosystem and industrial base to keep them going. I fear smaller vendors won't be able to go on like this forever.