Analysts say average laptop RAM quota will reach 11.8GB in 2024 — up 12% year-on-year

SK hynix 48 GB SODIMMs
(Image credit: ITHome)

Microsoft recently set the standard for modern laptops when it launched its Microsoft Copilot+ PCs. Aside from the 40 TOPS minimum of AI compute performance, the company said that these machines also need a minimum default 16GB RAM. Thus, manufacturers that want to get on the AI bandwagon are now putting 16GB as the minimum RAM for their laptops.

This drive is pushing up the average RAM capacity in laptops in the market. According to market research firm TrendForce, laptops will have an average of 11.8GB RAM in 2024, compared to 10.5GB last year. Although the growth may seem small at just 1.3GB, this is a 12% increase in memory capacity. Furthermore, the firm estimates that AI PCs, with its 16GB minimum requirement, will grow to 20.4% this year, further pushing the average laptop RAM capacity to 12.6GB next year.

However, this growth is held back to some degree by Apple’s stubbornness. Most of its entry-level offerings, including the M3 MacBook Pro and Mac Mini still start with 8GB RAM, and upgrading models to 16GB will set you back by $200 — more than double the price of individual RAM sticks you can find on Amazon. Unfortunately, since RAM is baked in on Apple-silicon chips, you have no way of upgrading your laptop down the line or even buying from a third-party source to double your MacBook’s RAM at the onset.

Apple claims that the M3 MacBook Pro’s 8GB RAM is equal to 16GB on PCs. While it’s true that macOS is much more optimized for its hardware than Windows will ever be, benchmarks have shown that 8GB of RAM seriously limits the MacBook Pro’s performance. Furthermore, we must remember that Apple uses unified memory, meaning the CPU, GPU, and NPU all share from the same pool of RAM, unlike Windows laptops with discrete GPUs that have separate RAM and VRAM.

We’ve been saying since 2022 that you shouldn’t buy a PC with just 8GB of RAM, unless you plan to upgrade it immediately. Even May’s Steam Survey results show that the majority of gamers have 16GB of RAM, but many are already inching toward 32GB. So, if you still have 8GB RAM on your desktop computer, consider upgrading to 16 or 32GB by checking out our best gaming RAM list for 2024.

Aside from greater RAM capacity, demand for higher-efficiency computing is also rising. In line with this, the firm expected LPCAMM2 modules to have greater demand in the coming years. Samsung already released a 128GB DDR5 laptop module last year, and Crucial also made 64GB LPCAMM2 in May 2024. These memory modules are still expensive, though, with the latter price at $330 per piece. However, as adoption rates for these RAM kits increase, we expect their prices to also fall.

These higher RAM trends show that 8GB is no longer enough for modern-day computing, and manufacturers should start using 16GB as the baseline minimum for laptops. Even flagship smartphones like the Samsung S24 Ultra and Google Pixel 8 Pro start with 12GB RAM, so if you don’t want to get frustrated with your laptop for your day-to-day tasks, check how much RAM it’s offering before buying it.

Jowi Morales
Contributing Writer

Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.

  • ezst036
    Admin said:
    16GB should be the minimum RAM for a modern laptop, but Apple sees things differently.

    So does Linux.
    Reply
  • peachpuff
    ezst036 said:
    So does Linux.
    Nobody uses that... for desktop use.
    Reply
  • salgado18
    ezst036 said:
    So does Linux.
    Disagree. In my workspace, programmers are using Ubuntu notebooks with 16GB of RAM, and it's not uncommon for all the open programs to consume it all. When they need more memory than available, the computer starts lagging heavily, until memory is realocated or something is closed. Linux is not that magical.
    Reply
  • coolitic
    peachpuff said:
    Nobody uses that... for desktop use.
    It's ~1.5x more common for "personal computers" than Macs are*

    *according to Steam's hardware survey, and a bit less than half of those are from Steam Decks
    Reply
  • KnightShadey
    coolitic said:
    It's ~1.5x more common for "personal computers" than Macs are*

    *according to Steam's hardware survey, and a bit less than half of those are from Steam Decks
    You think Steam's numbers are representative of the entire personal computing space ? 🤨

    Or that the Steam Deck sells ANYWHERE close to the number of Macbooks? That 2 or even 3x the Steam Deck number equals all Macs out there? 🤔

    Steam deck is estimated to have sold just under 4 million units for 2022 & 2023, meanwhile Apple sold over 30 Million Macbooks in those two years alone, ignoring years of previous sales or iMac, Mac Mini, etc.

    Reply
  • usertests
    So will every newly manufactured (not old inventory) Windows laptop come with 16 GB starting in 2025? I'd guess not, and there will still be budget machines with 8-12 GB. I think 4 GB is gone outside of the ChromeOS space, but who's counting?
    Reply
  • ezst036
    peachpuff said:
    Nobody uses that... for desktop use.

    Linux market share passes 4% for first time; macOS dominance declines
    Reply
  • KnightShadey
    ezst036 said:
    Linux market share passes 4% for first time; macOS dominance declines
    So linux market @ 4% share is 1/4 of MacOS @16% according to that, and 1/3 when Chrome OS @2.27% is included (which also declined).

    Still looks like a VERY distant 3rd for Linux, and a rounding-error compared to Windows @ ~80%.
    Reply
  • ikjadoon
    Unfortunately, it’s not just Apple, though they are—by far—the worst offender.

    Microsoft Surface, Lenovo ThinkPad, Lenovo ThinkBook, Dell gaming laptops, etc. are all still selling $1000+ 8GB models in the US (at least at Best Buy).

    https://www.bestbuy.com/site/searchpage.jsp?_dyncharset=UTF-8&browsedCategory=pcmcat138500050001&id=pcat17071&iht=n&ks=960&list=y&qp=condition_facet%3DCondition~New%5Esystemmemoryram_facet%3DRAM~8%20gigabytes&sc=Global&sp=-currentprice%20skuidsaas&st=categoryid$pcmcat138500050001&type=page&usc=All%20Categories
    Ironically, AI / CoPilot+ & iGPU gaming are pushing OEMs to 16GB base.

    With even $600 laptops shipping with high-end LPDDR5, there’s little excuse for the $1000+ market to justify a stingy 8GB SKU.
    Reply
  • KyaraM
    ikjadoon said:
    Unfortunately, it’s not just Apple, though they are—by far—the worst offender.

    Microsoft Surface, Lenovo ThinkPad, Lenovo ThinkBook, Dell gaming laptops, etc. are all still selling $1000+ 8GB models in the US (at least at Best Buy).

    https://www.bestbuy.com/site/searchpage.jsp?_dyncharset=UTF-8&browsedCategory=pcmcat138500050001&id=pcat17071&iht=n&ks=960&list=y&qp=condition_facet=Condition~New^systemmemoryram_facet=RAM~8 gigabytes&sc=Global&sp=-currentprice skuidsaas&st=categoryid$pcmcat138500050001&type=page&usc=All Categories
    Ironically, AI / CoPilot+ & iGPU gaming are pushing OEMs to 16GB base.

    With even $600 laptops shipping with high-end LPDDR5, there’s little excuse for the $1000+ market to justify a stingy 8GB SKU.
    That is outrageous considering that I got a gaming laptop with 16GB DDR5 RAM for 800€ just this week. With a Ryzen 5 7640HS and a 4060...
    $1000+ with only 8GB is almost criminal, last time I accepted that was 5 years ago, and only because the device went for less than 700€. Laptops nowadays really should ship with 16GB standard, especially gaming laptops.
    Reply