Welcome to 2026. Well, welcome to almost 2026 anyway. A new year means new stuff, new features for the stuff we already have, and new companies doing new things. 2026 will give us all of this, but maybe a bit differently than we’re accustomed to or expect.

The tech market depends on more than just good ideas and fast chips — the economy is a driving factor, and that will dictate what we see in the coming year. Combined with supply constraints, I expect all manufacturers to sell fewer products in 2026 than in 2025. Here’s why.

Agentic AI, where your electric buddy tries to help you without asking for it, is going to be a big deal, and you expect to see your next smartphone filled to the gills with it.

prices of your gadgets will continue to rise, with “cheap” gear being affected the most.

We’ll see plenty of incentives trying to justify it all, like free accessories or free access to otherwise paid services, but that doesn’t address the unsolvable issue of supply and demand.

Eventually, I think by mid-year, some company will find a way to tame the price problem. I can see a company with access to cheap labor finding a way to build the $400 flagship-level phone again when the Apples and Samsungs of the world want well over a thousand. It would be a perfect time for an Asian company like TECNO to make the leap to marketing in the West.

Pixel 10 would be fine running on a Pixel 9, but Google wants you to spend $999, so it holds them back. Apple and Samsung do the same.

In 2025, a budget-friendly phone may lack some things the previous model had to entice you to spend more and to save the company, making it a few pennies per unit by not including them. It all sounds petty until you translate those few pennies into 40 million units.

Galaxy S Ultra. It’s their pride and joy, showcasing what the company is capable of in one sleek, beautiful package. I’m not a fan of everything Samsung does, but as a phone nerd, I love the company’s Galaxy S Ultra because it does it all. Others feel the same way about the iPhone Pro Max or the Pixel Pro XL. They go beyond the flagship and are a true showcase.

Ditto for foldables. Samsung will never stop making the Galaxy Z Fold, nor will it stop trying to pack even more into it. Motorola, Google, and all the rest are the same. 2026 may even be the year Apple gives its customers what they want in a foldable phone.

This can’t change because enthusiasts will gather torches and pitchforks if it does. The issue ties back to the cost. It will cost even more to add more and build these uberphones, so the manufacturer is forced to charge more.

Fewer people will buy them, but those who do will love using them.