Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

China’s DeepSeek trims the price of its flagship AI model by 75%, and it could be a huge shift

Add as a preferred source on Google
DeepSeek AI chatbot running on an iPhone.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Chinese AI startup DeepSeek just made one of the boldest pricing moves in the artificial intelligence race so far. The company announced it is permanently slashing the cost of its flagship V4-Pro AI model by 75%, bringing prices down to just a fraction of what developers were paying only weeks ago. AI companies worldwide have been facing two major problems: high infrastructure costs and limited access to high-end AI chips. So when a company suddenly cuts prices this aggressively — and permanently — it usually signals something important is changing behind the scenes.

DeepSeek says usage costs for V4-Pro now range from 0.025 to 6 yuan per million tokens, depending on workload type, down sharply from the previous pricing range of 0.1 to 24 yuan per million tokens. For developers building AI apps, agents, and services, that kind of drop could significantly lower operating costs.

Huawei’s AI chips may be starting to matter

While DeepSeek did not directly explain what enabled the dramatic price cut, industry attention is immediately shifting toward Huawei and its Ascend AI chips. The company previously admitted that limited access to high-end compute capacity forced V4-Pro pricing much higher than its cheaper Flash model. At launch, Pro access reportedly cost up to 12 times more because advanced AI hardware remained constrained.

Now, those limitations may finally be easing. Huawei’s Ascend 950 chips have become increasingly important for Chinese AI firms after U.S. export restrictions blocked companies like NVIDIA from selling their most advanced AI hardware inside China.

This could intensify the AI price war

The bigger implication here is simple: AI models are getting cheaper fast. If Chinese firms can continue scaling AI performance while dramatically reducing inference costs, the global AI pricing battle could become far more aggressive over the next year. That puts pressure not only on rival Chinese startups but also on larger Western AI providers that charge significantly more for premium models.

Of course, the supply of hardware remains a major question. Huawei still faces manufacturing bottlenecks because of restrictions on advanced chipmaking equipment. But if DeepSeek’s price cuts are an early sign of improving AI infrastructure inside China, this may be the beginning of a much larger shift in the global AI market.

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
Meta’s Brain2Qwerty v2 turns thoughts into text, and it doesn’t need brain implants
The latest AI model decodes brain signals into coherent sentences using external scanners.
Meta Brain2Qwerty v2 Featured

Artificial intelligence is getting surprisingly good at understanding humans. Now, Meta wants it to understand our brains too. The company has unveiled Brain2Qwerty v2, an upgraded AI system that can translate brain activity into full sentences, all without requiring brain implants or surgery. The goal isn't mind reading for the masses. Instead, it's to help people who have lost the ability to speak communicate again.

How a Brain-powered keyboard works

Read more
AI chatbots can often feed into your delusions. Researchers say you should look for three signs
Experts warn that chatbot design choices can reinforce unhealthy beliefs in vulnerable users.
ChatGPT on a smartphone

Artificial intelligence chatbots have become incredibly good at sounding human. But a new review paper by psychiatrist Marc Augustin and fellow researchers Thomas A. Pollak and Helen Morrin, published in NPP—Digital Psychiatry and Neuroscience, argues that existing AI research points to an overlooked psychological risk. The paper, highlighted by The Wall Street Journal, reviews previous studies and proposes a framework explaining how three common chatbot behaviors can combine to reinforce delusional thinking in vulnerable users, creating what the authors call an "amplification spiral."

Researchers say these are the three warning signs

Read more
Lost access to your crypto wallet? Don’t Google your way out of it
Security researchers warn that fake recovery tools are becoming the latest trap for crypto owners.
Bitcoin crypto wallet featured

Forgetting the recovery phrase to a crypto wallet can be stressful enough. Unfortunately, that's exactly the moment scammers are waiting for. A new warning highlights a growing scam in which cybercriminals disguise malware as cryptocurrency recovery software, tricking desperate users into handing over far more than just access to their wallets.

The fake recovery tool that's actually malware

Read more