Sony PS5 Price Hike: New PlayStation 5, PS5 Pro and Portal Costs Take Effect April 2

March 28, 2026
Sony PS5 Price Hike: New PlayStation 5, PS5 Pro and Portal Costs Take Effect April 2

TOKYO, March 29, 2026, 00:48 (JST)

Sony is set to hike prices for its PlayStation 5 consoles starting April 2, bumping the U.S. standard model up to $649.99, with the Digital Edition at $599.99 and the PS5 Pro hitting $899.99. Over in accessories, the PlayStation Portal remote player gets a new tag of $249.99.

Sony is bumping up PS5 prices for the second time in under a year, just as the sector is banking on a stronger 2026 powered by heavy-hitting titles and subscriptions. The company reported a 16% drop in PS5 unit sales for the October-December stretch. Over at Epic Games, sluggish console demand was among the factors driving more than 1,000 layoffs this week. Circana projects a 3% uptick in U.S. video-game spending this year, though notes that hardware growth is being squeezed by pricier components.

Sony hasn’t provided a full breakdown of costs. Isabelle Tomatis, vice president of global marketing at Sony Interactive Entertainment, acknowledged that “price changes impact our community,” but described the decision as coming after “careful evaluation.” She said the price hike was necessary to continue offering “high-quality gaming experiences.” PlayStation.Blog

The crunch starts higher up the chain. AI data center expansion is steering memory manufacturers to focus on pricier server chips, leaving less for consumer gadgets. Gartner expects memory and solid-state drive prices to soar as much as 130% by the close of 2026. That could mean users hang onto their devices longer, Gartner analyst Ranjit Atwal cautioned.

Helium is another stress factor—key for chip production, where it’s critical for cooling, leak checks, and high-precision work. Qatar accounts for nearly a third of the world’s helium output. Now, the supply crunch is making its way through tech manufacturing, according to Cameron Johnson, senior partner at Tidal Wave Solutions, who told Semicon China, “a helium shortage is an absolute concern.” Reuters

Air Liquide, which supplies key gases to Taiwan’s chipmakers, warned this week about an imminent helium crunch and confirmed it’s shifting supplies from elsewhere to cover the gap. “There is today a shortage of helium,” said group vice president Armelle Levieux. Reuters

Sony rolled out new international pricing: the standard PS5 now runs £569.99 in Britain, €649.99 across Europe, and ¥97,980 in Japan. The Digital Edition will list at £519.99, €599.99, and ¥89,980. PS5 Pro? That’s £789.99, €899.99, and ¥137,980. Portal tags in at £219.99, €249.99, and ¥39,980.

Sony bumped U.S. prices in August 2025, moving the standard PS5 up to $549.99, the Digital Edition to $499.99, and the PS5 Pro to $749.99. Back in 2020, the standard model hit shelves at $499.99. So, the April price lands $150 higher than launch.

Last year, Microsoft bumped up Xbox console prices. Now Sony is pushing forward with a PS5 price hike, six years into the console’s life.

Sony faces a clear risk here: persistent component costs could keep console prices up, making some gamers hold off on upgrades or channeling their cash into software and free-to-play games instead. According to Gartner, pricier hardware limits what shoppers are willing to buy. Circana also points to 2026 as a year that could swing either way, as the industry banks on blockbuster titles to balance out challenges from sluggish hardware sales.

But there’s a holdout in Asia. Sony hasn’t posted the new prices yet for Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines, or Vietnam; retailers and buyers across Southeast Asia are still in the dark about local terms. The April 2 price hike is locked in for Sony’s main markets, but local details will land later.

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