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Logitech Quietly Raises Prices By Up To 25% (9to5mac.com) 111

Logitech has quietly increased prices on several flagship products by as much as 25%, according to findings (video) by YouTuber Cameron Dougherty. The MX Master 3S mouse now costs $120, up 20% from its previous $100 price point, while the MX Keys S keyboard has jumped 18% to $130. The K400 Plus Wireless Touch keyboard saw the most dramatic percentage increase, rising from $28 to $35.

These price adjustments, implemented without formal announcement, come amid ongoing tariff pressures from the Trump administration affecting PC hardware manufacturers. Chinese electronics maker Anker also recently implemented similar increases, suggesting a broader industry trend.

Logitech Quietly Raises Prices By Up To 25%

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  • Winning... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by BytePusher ( 209961 ) on Tuesday April 22, 2025 @09:09AM (#65322791) Homepage
    I'm so tired of all the winning
    • Re:Winning... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday April 22, 2025 @09:34AM (#65322841) Homepage Journal

      Consumers in the rest of the world need to keep a close eye on this. If companies try to spread the cost of the Trump tariffs to us, we need to reject their products. Americans pay 100% of the cost, not us.

      Sony is already trying it, so avoid their stuff.

      • A few years back, I bought a Logitech Webcam (C920) for £20. Then we had lock downs, and the price zoomed (see what I did there?) upwards. A colleague of mine proudly told me he'd bought a 'pro' camera at the knock-down bargain price of £50. In fairness, they were selling for £75 in some places, so he got a good deal at the time, but had he bought it 6 months earlier, he could have had two for less than the price of one.

        My point is, Logitech will absolutely put the price up to the highest

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Fair point, I do remember that. Luckily I had managed to get one before the pandemic too. It was something like £10 for a 1080p one, and it's actually quite decent in terms of picture and sound.

        • What's crazy to me is that the C920 has been on the market for like a decade and nobody has developed a better "basic webcam" device to compete with it. Yes there are alternatives out there but the C920 still is sitting top of the pack in it's class. Unless you want to invest in a more prosumer setup with a mirrorless or similar camera, if you just want a straightforward "webcam" the answer is still a C920 (or a Logitech Brio)

          • I used to have all-Logitech devices. Keyboard, headphones, webcam, mouse.
            Now I only have the C920 and the G502 Lightspeed. The keyboard started suffering from ghost key issue (double-n, double-b), and the headphones, while still working, have severe issues with volume cutting out in one or both channels due to horrible on/off slider design, I had to constantly fiddle with it while using them.

            I am now using a 10-year old Steelseries keyboard from another (now-decomissioned) PC, it's built like a tank. I splu

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        Consumers in the rest of the world need to keep a close eye on this. If companies try to spread the cost of the Trump tariffs to us, we need to reject their products. Americans pay 100% of the cost, not us.

        Sony is already trying it, so avoid their stuff.

        And sometimes it's unavoidable. Some stuff has traditionally gone through the United States for shipment elsewhere.

        It's a problem because if you want a PS5 in say, Canada, the boat could come from China, then land at the Port of LA, where it's assessed tarif

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          A similar thing happened when the UK declared sanctions on itself with Brexit. Suddenly goods that were transported over land through the UK were being shipped directly to and from Ireland. The EU made sure that Ireland didn't get cut off or disadvantaged by our stupidity.

        • That's not going to happen for much longer. It will be to China's and Canada's benefit to work out direct trade.
          • Everybody gangster until they have to implement what the U.S. Navy and Air Force and Army do to facilitate world trade. Unless Canada has a military tucked away somewhere that can protect trade, or even has some huge population of consumers somewhere to make it worthwhile, good luck setting up international trade routes without the U.S. . This is why U.S. taxpayers feel it when Trump asks why we pay for everyone else to have low prices and free trade. Itâ(TM)s time everyone pays up for what the U.S. of

            • The US doesn't do anything that Canada needs that China doesn't do. The American armed forces has lost a lot of power and influence globally in the last 20 years anyway.
              • It is not just piracy of the goods shipped from China; the stability of the inputs to China rely on U.S. military power as well. There is a rebel group that would love to see a strait shut down that supplies a lot of Chinaâ(TM)s energy input. This is just one of many issues the U.S. actively rectifies and by that grace allows China to import food and energy. Iâ(TM)m all for China and Canada stepping up to this plate, and paying for it. China will consume Taiwan for starters to make this happen. Ev

                • China has switched all their oil buying from the US to Canada in the last few weeks. This is a solved problem. As another person said, China has the resources for this. It is a solved problem.
      • In this situation, the corporations aren't the ones to blame. They never wanted these tariffs. Even most Trump voters didn't want tariffs, at least not as large as they turned out to be. This is all Trump.

        The point is, the corporations like Logitech, are the victims here, not the perpetrators. Let's not punish them!

  • A better idea (Score:4, Informative)

    by ZiggyZiggyZig ( 5490070 ) on Tuesday April 22, 2025 @09:11AM (#65322797)

    I'm sure they could leave the prices low and instead improve their margins with a subscription model for enabling the scroll wheel [arstechnica.com]. Win-win!

    • by zlives ( 2009072 )

      hey that may work out for me, i havnt used any of the 15 buttons on my mouse ever, can i get some money back?

  • - Cost of monitors up by 20%.
    - Cost of some peripherals up by 20%.
    - Cost of non-computer related electronic items up by 15%.
    - Cost of small kitchen appliances up by 50% is some cases.

    I don't even live in America FFS!!!

    • That's the scary part, that manufacturers increase the price worldwide, when the only change is the US tariffs. If you want the bully to stop, you need to stand up to them, but instead many companies will use tariffs as a perfect excuse to become greedier.
      • by RobinH ( 124750 )
        What's interesting is that after the steel and aluminum tariffs came into affect (25%) then the US steel manufacturers increased *their* prices by 25% just because they could.
        • I don't know what number of reason we are learning again about how tariffs are bad economic policy but this is another one, in a global world with global trade prices are not hyper-regionalized nor is pricing so simple as "supply in + costs + profit margin" but *especially* when you have just raised the costs of all inputs, from everywhere, with no plan in place to keep prices in control as well as no strategy to increase supply and domestic manufacture. It's just "put tax on imports, wait for good things

    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      Right well if you don't live here, then vote with your wallet, surely there must be some other manufacturer trying to gain market by not passing the US tariff costs they are not paying to you right?

      Oh right, they probably are already paying various taxes etc and now that they don't have to worry about people buying US market products and avoiding the tax some how they get the margins they want.

      From an American perspective, look at it this way. They alternative was going to be higher income taxes unless you

      • Income taxes are not the same as tariffs. Hell I have been arguing that an unpopular position is that the USA needs to broaden it's tax base so that means the middle and lower classes are going to see a bump in rates as well, not a lot but some. Those at the top get bigger rate bumps as well, naturally.

        Also why would they let child tax credits expire when Biden did it, successfully and Harris ran on keeping it?

        You think tariff costs get passed onto the consumer but Klobuchar's proposals to raise corporate taxes some how don't?

        Where do you want to start on the differences between these two things? The fact you consider t

      • by Malc ( 1751 )

        I like my old keyboard. Unfortunately, Microsoft stopped making them. So, I do have to keep it.

    • >I don't even live in America FFS!!!

      This is the part that should get interesting. The US basically IS the Western market, and as it walls itself off there are suppliers (China) who will have excess capacity they're trying to sell elsewhere.

      Even as the US drags down the global economy - I'm Canadian, we're going to get fucked hard because we've been so intertwined with the US for so long. But as Americans stop being able to afford imports, we should see a drop in our (non-American) import prices that ho

      • by GlennC ( 96879 )

        I buy direct from China, I don't go through Amazon or Wal-Mart, so I'm wondering exactly how much more expensive things are going to get for me (and by extension, other Canadians who do the same).

        I imagine things may get a bit more expensive for you (sorry!) but if the Chinese government is smart they'll do what they can to keep the increases to a minimum while doing as much damage to the US (especially the Republican states) as they can.

        • while doing as much damage to the US (especially the Republican states) as they can.

          They don't even need to think too hard about this, the admin is doing it right now

          https://www.nytimes.com/2025/0... [nytimes.com]

          In 2000 there were only 317 counties in the country where 25 percent or more of the residents' income came from government assistance - primarily in Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security payments. By 2020, that number had ballooned to 1,986 counties. What is particularly dangerous for Mr. Trump is that almost 80 percent of these counties supported Republicans in previous elections.

  • And way overpriced even before this increase.

    • I've bought two of their mechanical keyboards over the last three years and both have failed. Two rows of backlights are out on one and the left-shift stopped working on the other. I am not inclined to pay a higher price for another one.

  • The Swiss franc has been going up for ages. And perhaps the new CEO wants their bonus to go up as well....
  • Just bring back the Trackman Marble mouse already.

    • The original marble concept lives on in various devices. Did you mean the second Gen Big Ball fingertip marble? I hear Kensington saying hello from the early nineties.

      • by kriston ( 7886 )

        I have the ELECOM, Kensington Orbit, and other workalikes. The Trackman is just a better trackball even if it's missing the scrolly wheel.

        • The classic Kensington balls were the best, but they had some fairly decent ones later on which retained the billiard ball.

          I tried elecom too, their replacement is sloppy. The ball moves laterally too much. It was nice to have a wired option, but it's not worth it.

    • Just bring back the Trackman Marble mouse already.

      "... right now so I can pay an artificially higher price for it!"

  • Oh man. It's so totally shocking to see corporations increase their prices in markets irrespective of tariffs, using them as an excuse to increase profits.

    Thank god for those tariffs! Solving all of my problems.

  • I did that stickers? Just put them on all our electronics right next to the price tags.

    Fun fact the price of computers and computer parts was actually trending down prior to our illustrious orange overlord.

    Enjoy your national sales tax folks. They're going to cut their own taxes while raising yours. Donald Trump is now responsible for the single largest tax raise in US history. Yeah. Bigger than world war II. And you're going to pay it.
    • I did that stickers? Just put them on all our electronics right next to the price tags.

      I do wonder how the strangely-silent people who voted for Trump feel about this. They're really happy Trump caused the world to cancel the United States, right?

      • Based on what I have seen in social media there is a lot of "I don't think any of these actions he is doing are good, in fact they are bad and hurting my business, but I still support President Trump!"

        You see one of the biggest influences Trump brought to the Republican platform is that they can never... ever... ever... admit they made a mistake. It's double down and double down again and that is a dangerous place to be in for a ruling political party. They'll never go back on their actions, it's baked in

  • Fyi.. Canadian metal producers can't keep carrying the weight of tariffs for much longer. They are insulating you now but eventually it will have to give and it could add $12k to the price of a car.
  • FTFY

    To be honest, it doesn't look very planfull what's going on with you guys right now. Given, AFAICT the US could do with some fundamental constitutional housecleaning. Redo elections, public funding only, abolish gerrymandering, less power for the President, multi-party system, coalition governments, no private sector in the penal system, loser pays all for civil lawsuits and a few other details. Not trivial but really not impossible and actually quite easy to fix in a peaceful revolution without a singl

    • Given, AFAICT the US could do with some fundamental constitutional housecleaning. Redo elections, public funding only, abolish gerrymandering, less power for the President, multi-party system, coalition governments, no private sector in the penal system, loser pays all for civil lawsuits and a few other details. Not trivial but really not impossible and actually quite easy to fix in a peaceful revolution without a single bullet fired. However, what President Trump and his crew are doing right now looks a t
  • I just bought a Bluetooth/wifi mouse (rechargeable) for $8.
    (My decade old Logitech Bluetooth mouse stopped working with the latest software "upgrades".)

  • I use a Microsoft MSK-1113B USB mouse and a Dell QuietKey SK-1000REW PS/2 keyboard. Both have served me perfectly fine for literal decades without issue, and cost me only a few dollars each when I purchased them.

    Outside of some potential niche uses, I struggle to understand why one would spend over $100 on a keyboard or mouse when a basic PS/2 or USB one will work fine for the vast majority of use cases.

    • Outside of some potential niche uses, I struggle to understand why one would spend over $100 on a keyboard or mouse when a basic PS/2 or USB one will work fine for the vast majority of use cases.

      I am approaching about that cost, so I will attempt to explain. First, what is it? It's a Redragon "Devarajas" K556RGB. This is a third generation ARGB-backlit keyboard with doubleshot keys and a USB Type C jack instead of a captive cable. The PCB is made by evision. It has an aluminum case, hotswap switches (3 or 5 pin, comes with 3 pin switches) and supports macros and whatnot including mouse operations. The keys are doubleshot with dye sub color.

      I wanted a heavy keyboard so it didn't slide around so much

    • Same reason everyone doesn't drive Honda Civics, sometimes the tools you use the most it's worth having a nicer to use version of that. I have had my Corsair K95 mechanical for almost a decade problem free, I wouldn't trade it back for a membrane keyboard unless you literally paid me. When it breaks it's a total no-brainer for me to buy another mechanical again with backlighting, both features are well worth it to me, I use my keyboard a lot. Same reason I spend on decent shoes and a decent mattress.

      I st

  • with cheap chocolate Eggs ... oh wait ,,,
  • by kenh ( 9056 )

    Cheap foreign goods are going to be less cheap - the horror!

    Just curious, wouldn't it be better for the planet if every blessed thing we buy didn't have travel half-way around the world on a large boat that burns bunker oil (the worst polluting form of petroleum fuel, the literal sludge left after the other products are refined out of crude oil)? I mean imagine if the factories that made stuff was being monitored and controlled my our environmental rules, not in sweat shops on the other side of the world wh

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