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Up ~50% about 2 months ago (4/2026)
Even worse, continued RAM shortages and inflation might actually mean that will have been a good price in a year's time.
I hate this timeline: How is a Pi marginally cheaper than a Mac Mini?
That price I'd just buy an Optiplex or something

I have 4 RPi servers in my house on 24/7 but yeah

Funny different purpose but I bought a 2017 Pixelbook put Ubuntu on it, great machine it was $80

LMAO what a joke. N100 mini PCs are a hundred dollars less and vastly more capable aside from GPIO.
we've lost the plot. this is no longer a hobbyist computer.
Come on, a one gigabyte Pi is under $50. There's no plot lost, it's just expensive RAM. 2gb is $75. That's where Pi plays well.
This is really sad. Me and my girlfriend at the time watched all of our movies off of a Pi 1 and a USB hard drive when it came out. Those days are long gone.
I think people commentating here are missing the point. The cost of that pi is for the 16 GB of RAM. Which in fairness, is a lot of RAM for a device of that type.

You can still buy a Raspberry Pi on a budget if you don’t need that much memory. For example, the 2 GB model is $75.

2 years ago I bought a Dell R630 for about this much with 128GB of RAM and 2 beefy xeons (for their gen, anyhow). Oh, how the times have changed.
I really struggle to see where this fits in to most use cases. The appeal of the Pi back in the first iterations was being a relatively cheap linux computer with GPIO.
This is hilarious considering you can easily[1] get a whole ARM laptop with 16GB for $425 all day, and that will also include a screen, keyboard, trackpad, battery, and storage.

I first checked for Mac Minis and interestingly they are much closer to $650 for similar specs.

And obviously if Intel is fine for your use case, either the N100 type of mini PC or, my preference, an off-lease HP, Dell, or Lenovo USFF PC, would be like half that for a very capable machine.

[1] https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=m1%20macbook%20air%2016...

So strange. I can probably sell my 4GB Pi 5 for about 40% more than I bought it for... 3 years ago. This isn't how computers are supposed to work, let alone Pis.

I get what's happening, but it's strange to see it happening.

Actually, could I sell it for ~10% less than someone would buy it new? Is there a market for used Pis? Maybe 30%, I don't know. That I can sell it for what I got it for at all is wild.

My home cluster is built from surplus Dell Optiplex desktops that I got from BYU Surplus and added some RAM (before RAM price went totally bananas) and SSDs to. I spent less than the cost of one of these Pis to acquire all of them together.

I later added a large machine that I used to use as a Linux desktop, with a GPU and 64GB RAM, which I use for generating OpenStreetMap tiles.

Holy cow. I know I'm not supposed to be surprised given the memory shortage, but that is insane level.
I’m surprised to see those legacy USB ports on a board where space savings is important. Do they do it for backwards compatibility with older cases and housings?

And am I correct to see that the USB-C only does power? How do you connect your pheripherals to this board?

USB A? That's very much not legacy

If anything, it's probably like an order of magnitude more common, even for new designs

Are Raspberry Pis (UK country of origin) exempt from the 10% baseline import tariff?
The $35 computer, for only $350!
Who would've thought the $50 pi 5 I bought on a whim would be my best performing asset in the last few years
The Raspberry Pi 5 uses LPDDR4X. Finding 16GB (128Gb with a small b) chips in this size is not common. That memory chip is at least $200, probably more, even at the scale that they’re buying them.

I’m glad they’re making it available for the rare cases where it’s needed, but for PR purposes it would have been better if they just discontinued the 16GB model until RAM prices came down. I’m getting tired of hearing “Raspberry Pi 5 costs $300” now from people who have no reason to buy the 16GB version.

The 1GB version works well for simple Linux shell work and embedded projects. It’s $50.

The 4GB version works well for GUI work. Let’s be real: It’s a slow device and not a desktop/laptop alternative in 2026, so 4GB goes a long way for the use cases where you want to do basic GUI work. $110 for the 4GB model (if you shop not at Adafruit)

EDIT: Adafruit prices are higher for some reason. 16GB Pi 5 is $305 on other sites.

This isn't exactly news, that model has been at $350 for a while.

It's not like RPi suddenly introduced a 16GB model at a ridiculous price due to having forgotten about low cost stuff. The 16GB model was originally $85 iirc. Then the memory shortage hit. They could either withdraw the 16GB model (maybe screwing over some people who absolutely had to have it) or raise the price for those with urgent enough requirements. They did the latter.

Me, I'd like to see some large MCU's (let's say a little above RP2350 / ESP32 level) with a few MB of memory, but with memory protection, like old fashioned Vaxes with that much memory. That would allow running multiprocessing OS's where the processes couldn't easily clobber each other like on the current stuff. Many programs don't require GB's of ram.

Damn I think I have one in a drawer.