Motorola Edge 60 Fusion Price in India Could Be Hiked: Other Budget Moto Smartphones May Also Be Impacted
Smartphone prices in India have been slowly rising across all segments. The hikes are a result of the ongoing memory crisis and are impacting both older and newer smartphones.
While the hikes haven't affected older Motorola devices, new reports suggest that select G and Edge series models could see price increases in India soon. According to tipster Sanju Choudary, the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion, Moto G57 5G, and Moto G35 are all set to receive price hikes in India between Rs 500 to Rs 2,000.

Motorola Smartphone Price Hikes in India
The Motorola Edge 60 Fusion will get a price hike of Rs 2,000 across all memory options. Additionally, the prices of the Moto G57 and G35 are going to increase by up to Rs 1,000. Here's the full price hike breakdown:
| Model | Old MOP | New MOP |
| Moto G35 (4GB/128GB) | Rs 11,999 | Rs 12,499 |
| Moto G35 (8GB/128GB) | Rs 12,999 | Rs 13,999 |
| Moto G57 (8GB/128GB) | Rs 14,999 | Rs 15,999 |
| Motorola Edge 60 Fusion (8GB/128GB) | Rs 20,999 | Rs 22,999 |
| Motorola Edge 60 Fusion (8GB/256GB) | Rs 22,999 | Rs 24,999 |
| Motorola Edge 60 Fusion (12GB/256GB) | Rs 24,999 | Rs 26,999 |
For now, older Motorola devices have been immune to smartphone price hikes, although the Motorola Edge 70 Fusion recently got a substantial price bump over its predecessor. However, Motorola has introduced phones that offer incredible value in the last couple of months.
To recall, the Motorola Edge 70 was unveiled back in December 2025 and is currently one of the best smartphones under Rs 30,000 in India. Moreover, the Motorola Signature offers a well-rounded package in the sub-60K segment, making a strong case for flagship killer of the year.
While Choudary's post on X doesn't provide any further details about the price rise, he does note that this is only just the start. This suggests that more Motorola smartphones could get price hikes in India soon.
Not All Doom & Gloom
However, it's not all doom and gloom, as RAM prices do seem to be dropping. RAM has finally become a little cheaper, but not enough to relax anyone's budget. A 32GB kit that once cost $87 and later hit $370 is now about $40 lower. For home PC buyers in India and elsewhere, that shift feels tiny against two years of relentless memory inflation.
Right now, the DRAM market looks less like a recovery and more like a brief stumble triggered by changing AI plans. Corporate strategies at Google, OpenAI, Oracle, Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron have nudged prices down, but the underlying shortage remains.


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