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Microsoft increased prices for all of its Surface PCs this week, with most models priced hundreds of dollars higher than they were when launching. Windows Central highlighted the increases, which now see Microsoft's mid-range models priced above $1,000 and flagship models priced starting at $1,500.

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A Microsoft spokesperson said the price increase was due to "recent increases in memory and component costs."

Microsoft's 12-inch Surface Pro, which was its cheapest modern PC at $799, is now priced starting at $1,049. The flagship 512GB 13-inch Surface Pro is $1,499, up from $1,199 when it launched in 2024 (Microsoft also discontinued a $999 256GB configuration). The 13-inch Surface Laptop went from an $899 starting price to a $1,149 starting price, while the 13.8-inch model went from $999 to $1,499 and the 15-inch model went from $1,299 to $1,599.

The 13-inch Surface Pro and the 13.8-inch and 15-inch Surface Laptop models originally launched in 2024, and Microsoft did increase prices for them in 2025, so this is the second price increase. The 13-inch Surface Laptop and the two Surface Pro models that have seen a $300 price increase launched in 2025.

Microsoft's 13.8-inch Surface Laptop 7 with 16GB RAM and 256GB of storage used to be $100 cheaper than the 256GB M4 MacBook Air, but now it's $400 more than the 512GB M5 MacBook Air. Apple increased MacBook Air pricing from $999 to $1,099 with the M5 upgrade, but Apple's hike came with more base SSD storage. The Surface Laptop 7 is the laptop that Microsoft says is "faster than a MacBook Air M4."

Prices have increased for all Surface Pro and Surface Laptop models, from entry-level to high-end. Microsoft's PCs are now more expensive than their Mac equivalents, which is good news for Apple. The high-end Surface Laptop 7 with 64GB RAM and a 1TB SSD is $3,649, which is more expensive than the 16-inch $3,300 M5 Pro MacBook Pro with 64GB RAM and a 1TB SSD. Apple's M5 Pro chip also far outperforms the Snapdragon X Elite.

Windows Central says Microsoft has new Surface PCs coming later this year, which are also expected to have the same higher prices.

Microsoft's decision to increase PC prices comes as Samsung also raised prices for some of its smartphone models and all of its U.S. tablet offerings.

Both Microsoft and Samsung are responding to increased costs caused by global memory shortages. Chip makers are prioritizing memory for AI data centers, and there is little manufacturing capacity left for consumer devices.

Article Link: Microsoft Raises Prices for All Surface PCs, Making Them More Expensive Than Equivalent Macs
 
Surface laptops were about as close as it get's for MS to compete with Apple from a hardware/design standpoint, albeit I tried one and the trackpad was awful. Now the Neo comes out and they essentially nuke their Surface lineup into orbit cause they're unwilling to eat the costs or are so poorly managed they have to raise the price hundreds of dollars for a two year old product.

Apple users are used to paying more so the Neo is refreshing if it fits your needs, the opposite is true for the Windows laptop market and uses will buy the next Dell that comes along.
 
Framing this as “good news for Apple” implies that Microsoft’s hardware was ever competitive with Apple’s. It never has been. Microsoft is simply desperate to have some kind of consumer-facing product line (e.g., the Xbox, which has never been profitable and stopped even being competitive with Sony and Nintendo a decade ago).

Microsoft’s bread-and-butter has always been unsexy stuff like Office, Windows and Azure. Their consumer offerings (Zune, Phone et al) have tended to be industry footnotes.
 
Between last years elimination of Movies and TV Shows from the Microsoft Store with no way to transition existing purchases anywhere else and the removal of the dictionary from Microsoft Word—other than my gaming-only rig—I have already transitioned everything else I do over to Linux or Mac. The second that Linux becomes a stable gaming platform, I'll officially be done with Microsoft for everything.
 
Ouch. Right now is not the time to need to buy a computer...

Correct. If you don't need one right now, don't buy.

I was impressed with the MS Surface at first but now it’s constantly crashing, overheating and leaking a white residue from the keyboard. Then I was forced to download Windows 11…

My wife's primary computer is a Surface Pro 9. It's been a stellar machine, though the keyboard had to be replaced.
 
I have and never would consider owning one.

A 2020 i7 16 GB Chromebook does 80+% of what I need as a daily driver ($150 liquidator acquisition that will receive updates til mid-2030).

For heavier lifting, an M3 Pro 14" MBP 18GB/1TB does the job and then some!
 
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It’s not just that the Surface Laptop costs $400 more than the equivalent MacBook Air, it's also a two-year-old product. This is a sign of Microsoft exiting the hardware business, following the discontinuation of their input devices.
Kind of like the current generation of XBox which is significantly more expensive today than it was when released as a cutting edge console.
 
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