Sony Raises PlayStation 5 Prices on Tariffs
By Reuters | 21 Aug, 2025
Playstation 5 consoles will be priced as high as $749.99 to offset tariffs and supply-chain uncertainties.
PS5 by PlayStation is displayed in a GameStop in Manhattan, New York, U.S., December 7, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
Sony will raise prices of its PlayStation 5 consoles in the United States by around $50 from Thursday, as the Japanese conglomerate navigates a slow recovery in the videogame market while U.S. tariffs threaten to raise costs.
All three PlayStation 5 consoles will see a similar price hike, with the most expensive PS5 Pro version expected to cost $749.99, the company said in a blog post on Wednesday.
The price changes come after U.S. President Donald Trump announced sweeping tariffs on imports from global manufacturing hubs such as China and Japan, leading to fears of supply chain disruptions and high material costs.
Sony had raised prices of its consoles in various European markets in April. Rival Xbox also hiked sticker prices of its consoles and accessories in the U.S., Europe, Australia and the UK a month later.
Consoles were expected to be a major driver of videogame market growth this year due to the launch of premium titles such as Take-Two Interactive's "Grand Theft Auto VI" and Nintendo's Switch 2.
But console price hikes and the delay of highly-anticipated "GTA VI" to next year have cast some doubt on the pace of growth in the industry.
On Wednesday, Sony said there are no price changes for other markets and prices of PlayStation 5 accessories remain unchanged.
(Reporting by Zaheer Kachwala in Bengaluru; Editing by Leroy Leo)
Articles
- Japan Sets February Record with 3.46 Million Foreign Visitors
- Microsoft Considers Suit Against Partner OpenAI Over $50-Billion Cloud Deal
- Samsung Union Approves Strike Plan to Worsen Global Memory Chip Shortage
- Japan Pressured to Violate Pacifist Constitution, Send Escort Ships
- Chinese Students Told to Fall in Love As Beijing Targets Births, Consumption
- Japan Exports Grew for 6th Straight Month on Strong Asia Demand
- China Grants Approval to Purchase Nvidia H200 GPUs
- Powerful New AI Model Appears on OpenRouter, DeepSeek Suspected
- Nvidia Sees $1 Trillion Chip Sales in 2027, Excluding Restart of H200 GPUs for China
- US Travel Demand Robust Despite Higher Fares on Rising Fuel Costs
