If you’ve noticed IT hardware pricing creeping upward - or quotes expiring faster than ever - you’re not alone. What we’re seeing right now isn’t just inflation or routine supply - chain noise. It’s the early wave of a global hardware shortage driven by AI and data center expansion, and it’s hitting veterinary practices hard in 2026.
The good news? This is a known problem. And with the right planning - and the right IT partner - you don’t have to get caught off guard.
At IT Guru, our job is to see what’s coming before it disrupts your clinic. Here’s what’s happening, why it matters to veterinary practices, and how we’ll help you navigate it.
The short answer: AI is buying all the parts.
Large - scale AI data centers require massive amounts of memory and storage to function - specifically:
These are the same components found in the servers, desktops, and laptops your practice relies on every day.
Since late 2025, AI data centers have been absorbing a huge portion of global memory production. Manufacturers are prioritizing high - margin, AI - focused systems, leaving fewer components available for traditional business hardware.
The result? Scarcity - and rising prices. In a world of supply vs demand, the demand is currently drastically outweighing supply. Remember during the COVID pandemic when toilet paper was a commodity because of stockpiling and hoarding? It’s the same principle here with workstation availability.
Industry analysts are already sounding the alarm:
Servers are being hit especially hard, facing shortages in both CPUs and server - grade memory. For veterinary practices that rely on in - house servers, imaging systems, and performance - sensitive applications, this is a serious concern.
Even when equipment is available, manufacturers are quietly reducing default specs - less RAM, smaller storage - to hit price points.
In other words, you may soon be paying more for less.
Modern veterinary practices are deeply dependent on technology:
As hardware costs rise and availability drops, clinics will face:
Devices will stay in service longer - not because it’s ideal, but because replacement options are limited or expensive.
Older systems are more prone to failure, slower performance, and security vulnerabilities - especially under increasing software demands.
Unexpected server failures or workstation replacements may come with sticker shock if they happen at the wrong time.
This is exactly the kind of scenario where reactive IT hurts the most.
This is the moment for proactive planning. Here’s how we’re helping our clients stay ahead:
We help practices inventory their systems - age, warranties, performance, and risk points - so nothing sneaks up on them.
Anything over four years old deserves a closer look now, not after it fails.
If a server or critical workstation will need replacement in the next 12 - 18 months, waiting could mean higher costs, limited options, or long delays.
Buying earlier can lock in pricing and availability.
In some cases, targeted upgrades - like adding RAM or upgrading to SSDs - can extend system life and buy valuable time during the shortage.
We’ll tell you when that’s smart, and when it’s false economy.
This is also an opportunity to evaluate:
Flexibility will matter more than raw horsepower in the year ahead.
We’re advising clients to plan for:
Surprises are expensive. Planning is not.
This isn’t about fear - it’s about foresight.
As your IT partner, our role is to:
We’re already helping clients plan replacements earlier, lifespans smarter, and budgets more realistically - so they stay focused on patients, not parts.
Your veterinary practice may never touch AI infrastructure - but right now, you’re competing with it for hardware.
The clinics that plan ahead will stay productive. The ones that wait may face higher costs, longer downtime, and fewer options.
We’ll help make sure you’re in the first group.
If you have questions about your current systems - or want to know what’s at risk - let’s talk now before options diminish.