March 31, 2026
Over the past few months, many buyers have asked the same question:
Why are projector prices still rising, even though some memory products have started to fluctuate or even decline recently?
This is a fair question — especially after the recent market headlines around DDR5 retail memory price corrections in late March 2026.
However, for the projector industry, the answer is not as simple as “memory is down, so projectors should be cheaper."
In reality, projector prices have been under pressure since the second half of 2025, and the reasons go far beyond just one component. Even though some consumer memory prices have recently softened in spot channels, the overall cost structure for Android-based home projectors remains elevated.
In this article, we will explain in simple terms:
The current price pressure did not begin in March 2026.
It actually started building in the second half of 2025, especially from Q3 to Q4 2025.
According to TrendForce, the memory industry entered a clear upward pricing cycle in late 2025, and rising memory costs began to affect multiple consumer electronics categories. In November 2025, TrendForce already warned that rising memory prices were increasing overall system costs and forcing downstream brands to raise retail prices.
For projector manufacturers, this matters because even affordable Android LCD projectors depend on:
When these upstream components start moving up together, projector BOM costs rise quickly.
One of the biggest structural reasons behind the price increase is that memory makers increasingly prioritized:
TrendForce stated in January 2026 that suppliers were reallocating advanced nodes and capacity toward server and HBM products to support strong AI server demand, which significantly limited supply for other markets. As a result, conventional DRAM and NAND prices were pushed higher across the board.
In simple words:
Projector brands were not necessarily buying more, but they still had to pay more because supply was being diverted elsewhere.
This is why many projector factories started to face higher mainboard and storage costs even before the market noticed.
If late 2025 was the beginning, then Q1 2026 was the real acceleration point.
In early January 2026, TrendForce initially forecast that in 1Q26:
But by early February, the forecast was sharply revised upward:
That is not a normal fluctuation.
That is a major cost shock for consumer electronics.
For projector suppliers, this usually means:
Another important point: even though early Q1 is usually a softer season for consumer electronics, some embedded storage categories still remained tight.
TrendForce’s revised eMMC/UFS contract price report for 1Q26 said that strong server and AI demand led manufacturers to prioritize enterprise products, which severely constrained consumer eMMC and UFS supply. Despite the seasonal lull, low inventories and shortage concerns still pushed contract prices higher.
This is critical for the projector industry because projectors rely much more on:
That means:
Even if retail PC memory starts to move, projector-side component costs can stay high much longer.
This is the part many buyers are confused about.
In late March 2026, TrendForce reported that DDR5 retail prices in the U.S., China, and Europe had started to correct after a strong run-up. For example, some U.S. retail DDR5 kits dropped more than 20% from recent peaks, while Germany saw the first monthly decline after eight straight months of gains. However, average DDR5 prices were still about 408% higher than July 2025 levels.
So yes — the correction is real.
But that does not automatically mean projector factories are suddenly buying cheaper components.
This is the most important misunderstanding in the market.
Most of the recent headlines are about:
But projectors are more affected by:
These are not the same products, and they do not always follow the same pricing path.
So when buyers ask:
“Memory prices are falling — why are projectors still expensive?"
The practical answer is:
Because the memory products used in projectors are different from the retail DDR5 products making headlines, and projector BOM costs are still affected by embedded storage, board supply, and total component allocation.
TrendForce’s March 31 report also noted something very important:
In plain language:
Some traders are selling. Some consumers are waiting. But upstream factory costs have not fully reset.
That is why projector prices can still stay firm even when memory headlines look softer.
The recent market fluctuation was caused by several overlapping factors.
After a strong rally, some traders and stock holders began to release inventory.
This is normal in any overheated market:
This kind of move is common in spot channels, but it does not always change long-term supply fundamentals.
TrendForce has repeatedly pointed out that rising memory costs are starting to hurt downstream demand in consumer electronics.
For example:
The same logic applies to projectors:
So even when costs remain high, the market becomes less willing to accept more increases.
In late March, part of the market discussion also shifted because of new AI memory-efficiency narratives, especially after Google’s TurboQuant announcement.
This helped trigger broader debate around whether future AI memory demand might become more efficient, which added pressure to sentiment in memory-related markets. At the same time, TrendForce’s latest report still emphasized that supplier contract pricing remained stable and that the recent retail correction should not be overinterpreted.
So the better way to read the market is:
Sentiment softened first. Fundamentals have not fully turned yet.
Now let’s bring it back to what really matters: projector business decisions.
Because component costs are more volatile, suppliers are less willing to hold prices for too long.
That means buyers may see:
For buyers, delayed decisions now carry a higher risk.
This is especially true for:
A small increase in:
can quickly make an old target price unworkable.
That is why some suppliers may:
In a volatile component market, the cheapest model is not always the best buy.
Very often, the better choice is:
In uncertain times, a slightly higher-cost but proven model can reduce:
That matters much more than saving a small amount on paper.
This is the part your customers will care about most.
This is the biggest trap.
The recent retail correction in PC memory is real, but it does not automatically mean projector BOM costs have normalized.
Recommendation:
Track the real cost drivers instead:
If you already have:
then waiting too long can be risky.
Recommendation:
Secure the order earlier, or at least lock:
In this market, the risk is not only “price may go up again."
The bigger risk is:
The market is no longer a simple one-way trend.
So instead of:
a smarter approach is:
This gives buyers a better balance between:
For the next 6 months, the best strategy for most brands is:
This is especially important for brands that care about:
From late 2025 to March 2026, projector prices have risen mainly because of:
The recent decline in some retail DDR5 products is real, but it looks more like:
—not a full reset of projector manufacturing costs.
Projector pricing may become more volatile in the next 6 months, but for most mainstream Android-based projector programs, cost pressure is still real — and smart sourcing will matter more than trying to guess the perfect bottom.