Apple is jacking up prices by as much as 30% across its product line, using the AI data center boom as a convenient excuse to squeeze working Americans while sitting on a record-breaking cash pile.

When Big Tech cries poverty, the establishment press usually just prints the talking points. But Apple’s decision to hike prices on Macs, iPads, and other devices by up to $200 isn't just about a memory chip shortage—it's about a trillion-dollar company choosing to pad its margins on the backs of consumers already crushed by inflation.

According to CNET, Apple rammed through price increases ranging from 15% to over 30% on Macs, iPads, the Vision Pro, and more. Even budget and refurbished models got hit. Outgoing CEO Tim Cook told the Wall Street Journal the hikes were "unavoidable" due to the memory chip crunch—a sharp pivot from his earlier promise that Apple was "willing to use our balance sheet to help be a part of the solution." So much for that.

The company line is that "RAM-ageddon" forced their hand. As AI data centers hoard memory chips, prices for DRAM and NAND flash have quadrupled since 2025. "We have never seen a component price increase this much, this quickly," an Apple representative claimed in an email to CNET. Neil Shah, vice president of research at Counterpoint, backed the narrative, warning the bottleneck "is not bound to be better, at least for the next two years."

But follow the money. Apple reported industry-leading margins and $112 billion in cash. The Magnificent Seven tech giants are enjoying market valuations that mask a decrepit regular economy, and they are making the little guy foot the bill for their AI ambitions. Apple isn't broke; it's just passing costs to you to protect its bottom line.

Even the usual suspects in Washington are noticing. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told the New York Post the price hikes mean consumers are "subsidizing the development of a lot of data centers." She called to break up Big Tech, claiming "they want unchecked power." The Post also noted that experts like Mark Gurman argue these hikes are a "new normal" likely to stick around even after the chip crunch ends. AOC and Sen. Bernie Sanders want a moratorium on AI data centers, but government intervention won't fix a corporate accountability problem.

If these price hikes become the permanent baseline even after the memory crunch fades, Americans will have their answer: Big Tech didn't need to raise prices—they just wanted to.