2003-era DDR2 memory prices jump up to 60% — AI-driven DRAM shortage reaches the oldest standard still in production
TrendForce expects another 40% rise in Q3 as buyers downgrade specs to secure supply.
DDR2 contract prices rose 55% to 60% in the second quarter of the year and are projected to climb another 35% to 40% in the third, according to research published this week by TrendForce, pushing the AI-driven memory shortage onto a standard that first shipped in 2003 and that the three largest DRAM makers stopped prioritizing years ago. The increases come from buyers redesigning products around older memory to secure supply, and from a split among the handful of remaining DDR2 suppliers, with Winbond reducing output as ESMT expands it.
The shortage hasn’t hit DDR2 directly, but Samsung, SK hynix, and Micron have steered wafer capacity toward HBM and server DRAM to feed AI infrastructure spending, thinning the supply of mature-node parts, including DDR4. As DDR4 tightened, OEMs and ODMs began specifying DDR3 in its place, and some DDR3 designs were reworked to use DDR2, with each tier of buyers chasing whatever generation it could still source. The result of this is shortages moving down through successive generations, something we saw unfolding back in March, when earlier data showed DDR3 and DDR2 prices rising 20% to 40% in a single month.
This continues the market inversion we’ve watched unfold throughout the year, as DDR4 climbed past DDR5 on price despite being slower and older, and in which module makers and motherboard vendors restarted DDR4 production after the big three had moved to wind it down.
Winbond and ESMT are the two main remaining sources of DDR2 components, and they’re responding to the squeeze in different ways. Winbond is gradually cutting DDR2 production to shift capacity toward higher-margin DDR3, DDR4, and LPDDR4, while ESMT is doing the reverse, concentrating its wafer allocation at foundry partner PSMC on DDR2 to capture the demand Winbond is tossing aside. Taiwanese suppliers, including Nanya, are already struggling to match the volume of orders migrating down from DDR4, and because new capacity depends on slow process migration, Winbond's withdrawal removes supply faster than ESMT can replace it.
Of course, today’s PCs don’t use DDR2, so we’re likely to see the impact of these price increases landing in areas like embedded systems, networking equipment, industrial controllers, automotive electronics, and other long-lived devices that were designed around it and are too costly to requalify on newer memory generations like DDR4 and five.
The spread of rising contract prices to DDR2 suggests that we’re staring down the barrel of a very long-term DRAM shortage. Contract prices across the wider market are still rising with no sign of levelling off, and meaningful new capacity isn’t expected until late 2027 at the earliest as a best-case scenario.
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Luke James is a freelance writer and journalist. Although his background is in legal, he has a personal interest in all things tech, especially hardware and microelectronics, and anything regulatory.
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usertests https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DDR2_SDRAMReplyThe maximum capacity on commercially available DDR2 DIMMs is 8 GB, but chipset support and availability for those DIMMs is sparse and more common 2 GB per DIMM are used.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DDR3_SDRAMThe DDR3 standard permits DRAM chip capacities of up to 8 gigabits (Gbit) (so 1 gigabyte by DRAM chip), and up to four ranks of 64 Gbit each for a total maximum of 16 gigabytes (GB) per DDR3 DIMM. Because of a hardware limitation not fixed until Ivy Bridge-E in 2013, most older Intel CPUs only support up to 4-Gbit chips for 8 GB DIMMs (Intel's Core 2 DDR3 chipsets only support up to 2 Gbit). All AMD CPUs correctly support the full specification for 16 GB DDR3 DIMMs.I don't think the 4-8 GB DDR2 sticks are common, so you could be looking at 4x2GB. Which is enough for Linux or retro systems.
But it seems to be a small amount of production still occurring for legacy systems, not relevant to 99.99% of consumers.
DDR2 SDRAM is largely obsolete for consumer desktop and laptop markets, having been succeeded by DDR3 in 2007 and phased out of mainstream production by the mid-2010s. However, limited production continues for industrial, embedded, and automotive applications where long-term component availability is critical.I think people out there are considering Haswell + DDR3 if they are really trying to cut costs.
Manufacturers such as ATP Inc. and Micron maintain partnerships to produce DDR2 modules for mission-critical systems that cannot upgrade to newer platforms. While major consumer-focused producers have ceased output, companies like Nanya and Winbond still manage legacy DDR2 inventory, though some are gradually reducing capacity in favor of higher-margin modern memory types. Consequently, newly manufactured DDR2 is rare and typically sourced from surplus stock or specialized industrial suppliers rather than standard retail channels. -
JeffreyP55 Reply
Great chance to dust off the Phenom II X2 555. "One giant leap for man." One huge step backwards for technology..Admin said:DDR2 contract prices rose 55% to 60% in the second quarter of the year and are projected to climb another 35% to 40% in the third.
2003-era DDR2 memory prices jump up to 60% — AI-driven DRAM shortage reaches the oldest standard still in production : Read more -
Neilbob A while ago I wondered (jokingly, I thought) if the 4GB of Crucial Ballistix DDR1 I have kicking around could gain a new lease of life.Reply
It's rather scary that it soon could, genuinely. -
PEnns I think I will treat my 4x8 DDR3 sticks with more loving care......who knows, I might be running cutting age hardware with them at this rate!!Reply -
JeffreyP55 Reply
Yes indeed. My i7 4790k, GTX 1080 ti + 32GB of DDR3 is still chugging along running Win 10 for now. Hmmm, parting it out when the price is right! I hope that never happens.PEnns said:I think I will treat my 4x8 DDR3 sticks with more loving care......who knows, I might be running cutting age hardware with them at this rate!! -
Thunder64 ReplyJeffreyP55 said:Yes indeed. My i7 4790k, GTX 1080 ti + 32GB of DDR3 is still chugging along running Win 10 for now. Hmmm, parting it out when the price is right! I hope that never happens.
Damn that 1080 Ti is bottlenecked. -
derekullo DDR2-3200 has a single channel bandwidth of 3.2 gigabytes per secondReply
PCIe 2.0 has a per lane bandwidth of 500 megabytes a second allowing for 2 gigabytes per second read and write on a x4 card. (for the NIC)
In theory you could create a 10 gigabit ZFS NAS using sata hard drives or .... SSDs and 32 gigabytes of ddr2 ARC caching. -
PEnns ReplyJeffreyP55 said:Yes indeed. My i7 4790k, GTX 1080 ti + 32GB of DDR3 is still chugging along running Win 10 for now. Hmmm, parting it out when the price is right! I hope that never happens.
That 4790K (I have one too) is a true workhorse even now!! So many years later and it can handle almost everything!! -
JeffreyP55 Reply
That is true. Purchased the 1080ti in 2017. The purchase is when I was looking to upgrade in the near future. By the time that happened the 1080ti was getting dated.Thunder64 said:Damn that 1080 Ti is bottlenecked.