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Microsoft raises Surface laptop prices, and it’s cheapest is now twice as pricey as MacBook Neo

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Jeremy Kaplan/Digital Trends / Jeremy Kaplan/Digital Trends

Microsoft has apparently decided that its Surface PCs were not expensive enough, and has quietly raised prices across its entire current lineup at the Microsoft Store. The increases are not small adjustments either. We are talking about $200 to $500 jumps, depending on which model you are looking at, and other retailers are expected to follow suit shortly.

The flagships have crossed into absurd territory

The entry point to Microsoft’s Surface world has shifted dramatically upward. The Surface Pro 12-inch, which was the most accessible modern Surface at $799, now starts at $1,049. The 13-inch Surface Laptop, previously priced at $899, now opens at $1,149. To put that in perspective, Microsoft’s midrange devices now cost more than its flagship models did when they launched in 2024. That is a sentence that should not make sense, and yet here we are.

At the top of the lineup, things get genuinely hard to justify. The flagship Surface Laptop 7 and Surface Pro 11 both now start at $1,499, up $500 from their 2024 launch prices. On the other hand, a maxed-out 15-inch Surface Laptop with Snapdragon X Elite, 64GB RAM, and 1TB storage will now run you $3,649. For context, Apple’s 16-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro, the same RAM, and the same storage is $3,299, and it comes with a noticeably better display and significantly more performance. Microsoft is charging a premium to deliver less.

RAM costs are the scapegoat

Microsoft pointed to rising memory and component costs as the reason behind the hikes, with a spokesperson citing “recent increases in memory and component costs” as the driving factor. The company says it remains committed to delivering value, but that claim is difficult to sustain while pricing a mid-tier laptop above $1,000. RAM supply constraints have been squeezing the broader PC industry, so Microsoft is not alone in facing cost pressures. It is, however, one of the few companies passing those costs on this aggressively.

Perhaps the most telling sign of how upside-down this situation has become: the latest MacBook Air is now $400 cheaper than the Surface Laptop 7. This is making Microsoft’s value proposition increasingly difficult to defend. So, if you were holding out for a deal on a Surface Laptop 7 or Surface Pro 11 before the next generation arrives, that strategy has officially backfired. New Surface hardware is expected later this spring and summer, but given that Microsoft is locking in these higher prices ahead of those announcements, do not expect the refreshed models to be any cheaper. Sales may soften the blow somewhat, but that depends entirely on how steep the discounts are. For now, if you are in the market for a Windows laptop and do not want to pay what Microsoft is currently asking, there are many other options on the shelf that suddenly look much more competitive.

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
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