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FriedButter

Brigadier
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GeForce RTX 5090 Prices To Soar To $5000 As NVIDIA & AMD Prep GPU Price Hikes in Q1 26​

NVIDIA and AMD are expected to raise GPU prices significantly in the coming months, as reports suggest up to $5000 for the flagship RTX 5090.

We have covered reports that AMD and NVIDIA are planning to raise GPU prices in the coming months. There was already a hint of these price hikes for Q1 2026, which would further disrupt the DIY gaming PC segment, and it looks like the pricing structure across a broad spectrum of consumer GPUs is going to get messier.

According to the Korean Tech outlet, Newsis, who cite industry sources, it is once again reported that the rising DRAM prices will lead to higher prices for not just consumer GPUs, but also Data Center GPUs by NVIDIA and AMD. The latest data suggests that AMD is preparing a price increase as early as January 2026, which aligns with previous reports, while NVIDIA is planning a price hike by February 2026.

The price increase will primarily affect the current-gen lineups, such as NVIDIA's RTX 50 "Blackwell" and AMD's Radeon RX 9000 "RDNA 4" series. The price increase will come in gradual steps, starting in Jan / Feb 2026 and continuing to see increments every passing month.

Most GPUs saw prices falling below MSRP in recent months, but these were mostly in part thanks to holiday deals. In the coming months, NVIDIA's flagship GPU, the GeForce RTX 5090, is expected to see a major price increase, soaring up to $5000 US. The GPU initially launched at $2000 US, so that makes it a 2.5x increase versus the official MSRP.

Quoting an industry insider regarding memory prices, it is stated that GPU manufacturing costs have exceeded by 80% from the memory portion alone. We should also state the recent influx of reports stating that NVIDIA is cutting down the manufacturing of GeForce RTX 5060 Ti & GeForce RTX 5070 GPUs.
The GPU initially launched at $2000 US, so that makes it a 2.5x increase versus the official MSRP.
 

Chevalier

Captain
Registered Member
Australia and the UK are among the largest overseas markets for Chinese cars, and a big portion of those customers are boomers.
They love Chinese cars. If people in the "Five Eyes" —who actually hate China politically—can get over their bias, why are Iranian boomers still hold onto such deep-seated racism? Aren't Iran and China supposed to be in the same camp?

Russia is sanctioned heavily, and on paper, Chinese companies have export controls there too. Yet, the Russians figure out how to get Chinese products. Even North Korea and Russia can manage parallel imports or smuggling in this global system—why is Iran incapable of doing the same? Aren't affordable, high-quality Chinese goods exactly what Iran’s sanction-crippled economy needs? Instead of figuring out import channels themselves, Iran expects Chinese companies to risk sanctions and hurt their own interests to enter? Where does this entitlement come from?

Hoping to sell them to US allies instead??? Source? Or you mean Pakistan?

Here's what I say to these people: nobody made you buy Chinese products.
If the Iranians are so inept, perhaps that land, the real estate would be better off in the hands of more capable nations like Pakistan and Iraq.
 
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