TL;DROnePlus is exiting the US and Europe as early as this week. Realme exits China. OnePlus will shut down globally by 2027. The memory shortage killed its budget lineup.

OnePlus, the Android brand that built a cult following with aggressively priced smartphones, will begin to cease operations in the US and Europe as early as this week, Bloomberg reported. The shutdown is part of a broader restructuring at parent company Oppo. Realme, another Oppo mobile brand, will also exit the China market. While OnePlus will remain active in China for now, the brand’s closure is planned to expand globally, including India, at some point in 2027.

Oppo is making the moves because of financial challenges in its phone businesses, a lack of momentum in the US, Europe, and India, geopolitical concerns about selling Chinese phones in the US, and an Apple lawsuit related to trade secrets. In the US, OnePlus trails far behind not just Apple and Samsung but also smaller players like Motorola and Google Pixel. Its most recent flagship, the OnePlus 15, had a rocky US launch that was delayed by a government shutdown.

The component shortage has made OnePlus’s core proposition, high specs at low prices, structurally uneconomic. The AI-driven memory crisis has driven LPDDR prices up 250% in a year as Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron redirected production toward data centre chips. OnePlus’s budget “Nord” lineup depended on cheap components that no longer exist. Chinese handset shipments fell 4.3% in Q2 year on year, according to IDC.