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In 2026, the price index will climb to 61.9, representing a 3.5% jump. Computer and peripheral equipment producers lean into price increases as they manage lingering semiconductor supply constraints, elevated freight costs and higher energy and material costs. Vendors focus on preserving profit while still competing aggressively in a maturing market, using feature upgrades such as integrated AI accelerators and enhanced security to justify firmer pricing. Over the past five years, prices have shifted from historic deflation to relative stability, rebounding from their historical low in 2020 as the pandemic scrambled both sales and supply. Early in the period, lockdowns and demand uncertainty drove discounting and inventory clearances, briefly pushing the index to multi-year lows before remote work, e-learning and cloud expansion unleashed a powerful replacement and expansion cycle in 2021-2022.Chip shortages, logistics bottlenecks and surging needs for GPUs and high-end CPUs forced OEMs to prioritize higher-margin configurations and accept longer lead times, supporting a faster-than-usual upswing in producer prices. As supply chains adjusted and new capacity came online, annual price movements moderated from 2023 onward, with the index stagnating in 2024 before climbing again by 2026 as AI and advanced components introduced fresh cost pressures. This period effectively reset the industry's price floor, replacing years of steep quality-adjusted declines with a flatter trajectory shaped by structural supply chain and technology shifts.
Curious about what drives these trends? IBISWorld's analyst coverage on the producer price index: computers and peripheral equipment includes detailled analysis on the current performance, outlook and industries affected.
1995-2032
The Price of Computers and Peripheral Equipment represents the Producer Price Index (PPI) for computer hardware and related equipment in the United States. This index measures the average change over time in the selling prices received by domestic producers for computers, monitors, keyboards, mice, printers, and other peripheral devices. The index uses 1982 as the base year (2006=100). Data is sourced from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics.
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The producer price index for computers and peripheral equipment in the US in 2026 was 61.89 index points.
The producer price index for computers and peripheral equipment in the US grew by 2.27% in 2026.
IBISWorld’s data and analysis on producer price index for computers and peripheral equipment in the US includes forecasted growth rates over the next five years.