If you were thinking about buying a PS5, today is a very bad day for your wallet. Sony has officially raised the price of every PS5 model effective April 2, 2026 — and this isn’t a small adjustment. We’re talking $100 across the board, with the PS5 Pro getting a brutal $150 hike. This is the second price increase in under a year, following a $50 bump in August 2025, and it’s hitting gamers hard.
💸 The New PS5 Prices
- 🎮 PS5 Disc Edition: $649.99 (was $549.99) — up $100
- 📱 PS5 Digital Edition: $599.99 (was $499.99) — up $100
- ⚡ PS5 Pro: $899.99 (was $749.99) — up $150
- 📡 PlayStation Portal: $249.99 (was $199.99) — up $50
For reference: the PS5 launched in November 2020 at $499.99 for the disc edition and $399.99 for digital. You are now paying $150-$200 more for the same six-year-old hardware.
🔍 Why Is This Happening?
Sony’s VP of Global Marketing Isabelle Tomatis cited “continued pressures in the global economic landscape” in the official PlayStation Blog announcement. Industry analysts point to two main culprits: a global RAM shortage that has driven memory chip prices through the roof, and the ongoing impact of trade tariffs. The broader technology industry’s focus on building AI infrastructure has caused chipmakers to prioritize high-margin data centre chips over consumer electronics components — squeezing supply and pushing prices up across the board.
This isn’t unique to Sony either. Microsoft raised Xbox prices in 2025, and Nintendo hasn’t been immune to component cost pressures with the Switch 2 either. The entire console market is in a genuinely difficult spot right now.
😤 The Community Reaction
Predictably, the gaming community is furious. The timing is particularly rough — PlayStation enthusiasts were already frustrated over the recent closure of Bluepoint Games and Dark Outlaw Games, and the PS5 generation has so far delivered more price hikes and studio cuts than new first-party franchises. The PS5 has also been on the market for over six years with no PS6 in sight, making the price increase feel especially tone-deaf.
PS5 sales had already declined 16% in the October-December 2025 holiday quarter compared to the prior year. It’s hard to imagine another $100 price hike helping those numbers recover.
🎮 Should You Still Buy One?
If you’ve been on the fence, the calculus hasn’t fundamentally changed — the PS5 is still a great console with an excellent library. But there’s genuinely no sign prices are coming back down any time soon. If anything, the trajectory suggests the PS6 is going to launch at a price that would have seemed absurd five years ago.
The PS5 is still worth owning for exclusives like Spider-Man 2, Final Fantasy VII Rebirth, and the upcoming Saros and Marvel’s Wolverine. But if your budget is tight, the Xbox Series S remains the most affordable way into current-gen gaming, and PC gaming has never been more accessible at the mid-range.
🎙️ The Gamer Couch Take
Two price hikes in under a year on six-year-old hardware is a tough sell. Sony’s reasons are real — chip shortages and tariffs are genuine economic pressures — but that doesn’t make it sting any less for the community. The PS5 generation has been defined by scarcity, price hikes, and studio closures more than by the kind of bold first-party swings that made PlayStation legendary. Here’s hoping the PS6 era looks very different.
— Conductor Chaos, The Gamer Couch

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