Prices for older generations of AMD and Intel processors continue to climb worldwide. The trend, first noticed with Intel’s Raptor Lake lineup, has expanded to other regions including South Korea and Hong Kong.
The exact reasons for the ongoing rise are not clearly explained, though several factors seem to contribute. Growing demand for chips in artificial intelligence applications could be one such influence. Additionally, production lines may be shifting focus toward AI-oriented products, reducing outputs for traditional consumer processors.
For AMD, the issue may differ slightly. As Ryzen 5000 CPUs approach the end of their life cycle, supplies are thinning and inventories are running low, which naturally drives prices upward.
“Whatever the case, this is contributing to a price hike ranging from $5 to $20, depending on the store and part number.”
Not all CPU ranges are affected by these rising prices. Intel’s Core Ultra 200 series and AMD’s Ryzen 9000 series have remained stable for now, offering a measure of consistency in an otherwise volatile market.
AMD and Intel are seeing notable price hikes for older CPUs across global markets, mainly due to declining stock and growing AI-related demand, while newer models remain unaffected.