Apple's latest round of price increases has officially reached India. After weeks of speculation and warnings from the company about rising component costs, revised pricing is now live across much of Apple's Mac and iPad lineup.The move comes amid a global surge in memory and storage prices, a trend Apple says has been driven largely by the rapid expansion of AI infrastructure. For Indian consumers, who already pay a premium over US pricing due to taxes and import duties, the increases make Apple's ecosystem even more expensive.We flagged the possibility of these hikes last week. Now they are here.Why Apple is raising pricesThe biggest factor behind the increase is a shortage of memory components. RAM and NAND flash storage prices have risen sharply over the past year as demand from AI companies and hyperscale data centres continues to climb.Apple has been unusually direct about the reason behind the increase."The consumer electronics industry is facing an unprecedented challenge," the company said in a statement. "The rapid expansion of AI data centers has created an extraordinary surge in demand for memory and storage. We have never seen a component price increase this much, this quickly."According to Apple, it spent months absorbing higher component costs before deciding that price increases had become unavoidable."We have shielded our customers from these increases so far, but we have now reached a point where we need to begin raising prices on a number of products, including today's increases for iPad and Mac. We know this is not welcome news, and we are working tirelessly to find solutions."The company has historically treated pricing as part of its brand strategy rather than something that fluctuates with short-term market conditions. That means these increases are unlikely to be temporary. Once Apple raises prices, they typically become the new baseline.What's particularly notable is that these increases are not tied to a new product launch. Buyers are effectively paying more for the same hardware that was available at lower prices just weeks ago.Apple's New India PricingThe following prices reflect the updated starting prices across Apple's Mac and iPad lineup in India:ProductNew Starting PriceiPad₹47,900iPad Mini₹69,900iPad Air₹83,900iPad Pro₹1,39,900MacBook Neo₹79,900MacBook Air₹1,49,900MacBook Pro₹2,39,900iMac₹1,74,900Mac Mini₹94,900Mac Studio₹2,79,900The increases are especially noticeable higher up the lineup, where devices with larger memory and storage configurations are more exposed to rising component costs. Professionals, creators, developers, and power users who typically opt for higher-end configurations are likely to feel the impact the most.The AI effect is now hitting consumersFor years, AI has largely been a story about data centres, GPUs, and cloud infrastructure. What Apple's latest pricing update demonstrates is that the knock-on effects are now reaching consumers directly.As companies race to build ever-larger AI clusters, they are consuming vast quantities of memory and storage. That competition is pushing up prices across the broader technology industry, creating cost pressures that eventually find their way into consumer products.Apple's explanation effectively confirms what many analysts have been warning about for months: the AI boom is no longer just influencing the technology sector. It is beginning to affect the price of the devices people buy every day.What this means for buyersThe reality is straightforward. Apple products in India are now more expensive, and there is little indication that prices will reverse anytime soon.For buyers who were planning an upgrade this year, the decision-making process has changed. Rather than waiting for prices to drop, it may make more sense to focus on bank cashback offers, exchange bonuses, student discounts, and retailer promotions that can offset some of the increase.The bigger takeaway, however, is that this may not be the last adjustment. If memory shortages continue and AI infrastructure spending remains at current levels, pricing pressure across the consumer electronics industry could persist well into the future.For now, Apple's message is clear: the AI boom is making more than just data centres expensive. It's making Macs and iPads more expensive too.