AMD to allegedly raise graphics card prices by at least 10% in 2026 — price surge attributed to ongoing AI-related DRAM supply crisis
Rising memory prices blamed as GPUs look set to become more expensive in 2026.
After weeks of hints and speculation, it's now (almost) official: AMD has told its supply partners that it will raise graphics cards prices by at least 10% in the new-year due to rising memory prices, as per analyst Dan Nystedt (via UDN). This is reportedly the second time AMD has raised its prices in recent months, though the first was kept internal and just ate into AMD's margins. This time though, it's passing it on to the partners, who will in turn pass it on to consumers.
AMD has notified supply chain partners it will raise graphics card prices 10% across the entire product line due to rising memory chip prices, media report. It will reportedly be AMD’s 2nd such price increase. $AMD $NVDA #Semiconductors https://t.co/pi2hsmmhCANovember 24, 2025
The subject of graphics card pricing has been a contentious one for a number of years now. Prices and power draw have risen generation upon generation, and cryptocurrency-induced shortages have occasionally spiked demand and the cost of a new GPU in turn. 2025 started with something similar, though that seemed to be more down to deliberately constrained supply — or perhaps a shift of Nvidia and AMD's focus to AI.
That's only become more apparent throughout the year, and as data centers the world over ate up GPUs, CPUs, memory, storage, and anything else they could get their hands on (including entire power plants), prices for most components have risen in turn. None quite so much as memory, though, which has jumped close to 200% per stick in recent months, and that shortage is now making its way into other industries: most notably, graphics cards.
PowerColor recently warned that GPU price rises were coming, and AMD seems to have now confirmed it to its suppliers and board partners. In the translated text, UDN's sources claim it'll be by at least 10%, suggesting that could be the floor of AMD's potential price rises. However, Mr Nystedt suggests that 10% is the figure, so we'll have to wait and see how it shakes out or for an official announcement from AMD, to know for sure.
This is unfortunate timing for AMD which has struggled to get the price of its flagship RX 9070 XT even close to its recommended retail price throughout the year. It just managed it this week, hitting $599 for the first-time since release as part of Black Friday. But that seems likely to be incredibly short-lived. Not least because that's a decent deal for a great graphics card.
AMD is unlikely to be alone in its GPU prices rises either. Nvidia is expected to have delayed the launch of an RTX 50 Super series of graphics cards because of memory shortages, and unlikely to lose profit on its graphics cards when selling to gamers since it makes so much selling them to data center developers.
If you're keen to get ahead of the price rises and want to buy a graphics card before the end of the year, here's our list of the best graphics cards out there right now. Better yet, check out our Black Friday deals page to see if there's something you can snap up before anyone else.
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Jon Martindale is a contributing writer for Tom's Hardware. For the past 20 years, he's been writing about PC components, emerging technologies, and the latest software advances. His deep and broad journalistic experience gives him unique insights into the most exciting technology trends of today and tomorrow.
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yahrightthere As far as I'm concerned, don't buy memory, gpus, cpus.Reply
Those who do, both consumer and enterprise, are playing right into the hands of the MFGer.
Stay with what you have till the prices come down & stabilize, -
valthuer No matter which brand anyone prefers, I think we can all agree on one thing: the constant price increases across the entire GPU market are a reminder of how interconnected the tech world has become. When AI demand surges, everything from memory to power infrastructure gets squeezed — and eventually, consumers feel it. It’s not about blaming AMD or Nvidia; it’s simply the reality of a global supply chain under unprecedented pressure. And while it would be great to hope for a healthier balance between innovation, availability, and price, I genuinely doubt we’ll ever see that happen as long as demand keeps outpacing supply at this scale.Reply -
thisisaname Reply
Given memory prices look they going to double (at least) and with AMD tending to put more memory on it's cards (than Nvidia) then 10% looks rather low.LordVile said:AMD shooting themselves in the foot again
How much are Nvidia's price going to go up next year? -
LordVile Reply
Point is AMD aren’t aggressive enough on pricing as is and they don’t pay consumer prices and are likely not effected at all by this as prices are contracted when the order is put in to the vendor.thisisaname said:Given memory prices look they going to double (at least) and with AMD tending to put more memory on it's cards (than Nvidia) then 10% looks rather low.
How much are Nvidia's price going to go up next year? -
Shiznizzle Reply
Hardly. AMD are not the only ones increasing prices. Everybody isLordVile said:AMD shooting themselves in the foot again
AMD are doing fine. I switched from Nvidia and went back to AMD like i was the for the majority of the last 30 years. I bought into the 1060 and used a 3060 for 2 years but i am not paying geedvidia for their fake frames 5000 series. I am also on linux now so need far less headaches that nvidia cards hand out . Yes they work on linux but they can be problematic.
I bought my 9060XT already. I bought my DDR5 already and i upgraded capacity on my M2. All pre-crazy AI bubble price rises. I am set to go to AM5 now and did it without the crazy profit margins for them. -
Heat_Fan89 Currently the 9070XT Reaper is selling for MSRP on Amazon and the ASRock 9070XT OC'd Challenger is selling for $610.Reply