Rupiah Pressure Pushes Gadget Prices Higher, From Entry-Level Phones to iPhone

Author: Qoo Media

The weakening rupiah, which has pushed the dollar to Rp18,000, is starting to ripple through Indonesia’s gadget market. Smartphones are among the most exposed products because many of their components still depend on imports.

That pressure is landing at a time when the industry is already dealing with higher global memory costs. The combination is making new phone prices rise gradually across segments, from entry-level devices to premium flagships.

Production costs are rising from two directions

A weaker rupiah increases the cost of importing components and finished devices. In practice, that gives manufacturers more reason to pass part of the added burden into retail prices so margins can be protected.

The ongoing global memory crisis is making the situation worse. Higher prices for RAM and storage chips have pushed up device production costs even further.

The impact is no longer limited to premium models

Price increases are now visible in several newer models from different brands. Their selling prices are already higher than the previous generation, with gaps that can reach hundreds of thousands to millions of rupiah depending on the device class.

Entry-level and mid-range phones are also feeling the strain. As production costs keep rising, manufacturers are adjusting pricing strategies across the market rather than limiting increases to flagship products.

Buyers are becoming more cautious

The shift is already affecting consumer behavior in Indonesia. Many prospective buyers are choosing to delay smartphone upgrades or move toward used devices that are seen as more affordable.

Industry observers assess that the price pressure is one of the factors slowing national smartphone market growth. Demand has not disappeared, but higher prices are making purchase decisions more selective.

The risk of another increase has not eased

If the dollar continues to strengthen in the coming months, smartphone prices in Indonesia may still be adjusted again. The effect could reach Android devices as well as premium models such as Samsung and iPhone.

For many buyers, that makes earlier purchases look increasingly practical. As long as exchange-rate pressure and component costs remain elevated, gadget prices are likely to keep moving upward and the market is expected to stay cautious.

Price pressure by market segment

Segment Pressure
Entry-level phones Also being pushed higher by production cost increases
Mid-range phones Manufacturers are adjusting pricing strategies across the segment
Flagship models Already showing higher prices than previous generations

The market is now dealing with a double burden: a weak rupiah on one side and expensive memory components on the other. Until one of those pressures eases, smartphone buyers in Indonesia may continue to face higher prices across almost every tier.

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