Samsung Raises Prices for Popular Galaxy Phones in India: Check All Models and New Prices
Samsung has officially revised prices for several Galaxy smartphones in India, and the changes are now in effect starting today, January 5. The update impacts the Galaxy A56, Galaxy A36, and Galaxy F17 5G across all storage variants, confirming what many retailers and buyers had been anticipating over the past few weeks.

While the hikes vary by model, they follow a clear pattern. The Galaxy A56 is now ₹2,000 more expensive across the board, the Galaxy A36 has gone up by ₹1,500, and the Galaxy F17 5G has received a ₹1,000 increase on every configuration.
Here’s the Full List of Updated Prices
Samsung hasn’t adjusted individual variants selectively. Instead, each model sees a flat increase across its lineup.
The Galaxy A56 now starts at ₹40,999 for the 8GB RAM and 128GB storage variant. The 8GB and 256GB option is priced at ₹43,999, while the top-end 12GB and 256GB version now costs ₹46,999.
The Galaxy A36 has also moved up a notch. Its 8GB and 128GB variant now sells for ₹32,499. The 8GB and 256GB model is priced at ₹35,499, and the 12GB and 256GB version comes in at ₹38,499.
On the more affordable side, the Galaxy F17 5G now starts at ₹15,499 for the 4GB RAM model. The 6GB variant costs ₹16,999, while the 8GB RAM option is priced at ₹18,499.
Why Smartphone Prices Keep Moving Up
Samsung’s price revision doesn’t exist in isolation. Over the past few months, multiple brands have quietly adjusted prices on existing models, and upcoming launches are increasingly debuting at higher-than-expected price points.
One of the biggest reasons is rising memory and storage costs. Demand for advanced memory chips has surged as AI workloads grow in data centers, and chip makers are prioritizing those higher-margin segments. That has reduced the supply of general-purpose memory used in smartphones and laptops, pushing up component prices.
At the same time, supply chain pressures and a weaker rupee against the US dollar have made imports more expensive. Even companies with in-house chip capabilities still rely on global supply chains, which makes absorbing these costs difficult without adjusting retail prices.
Budget and Mid-Range Phones Aren’t Immune
What’s changing this time is where the impact is being felt. Budget and mid-range phones, which account for a large share of smartphone sales in India, are seeing more frequent price corrections. Memory alone can make up a meaningful portion of a phone’s production cost, and margins in this segment are already thin.
As component prices continue to rise, brands have fewer options. Some may look at services or subscriptions to balance costs, but hardware prices are still moving upward, and consumers are starting to feel it.
What Buyers Should Take Away
For now, Samsung’s flagship phones remain unaffected, and there’s no official word on whether models like the Galaxy S25 series or the latest foldables will see similar revisions. Still, with costs rising across the industry, phones launching later in 2026 are widely expected to carry higher price tags.
If you’re planning an upgrade, the broader trend is worth keeping in mind. Prices on existing models are becoming less stable, and waiting too long could mean paying more for the same hardware.


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