These are the best GPU ‘deals’ based on real-world scalper pricing and our FPS per dollar test results

Buying any of the best graphics cards right now feels like an exercise in futility. For that matter, buying virtually any graphics card at present tends to be a bad idea. We’ve scoured a variety of online markets to see what sort of prices we could find, and MSRPs are effectively non-existent — laughably so. Everything worth buying sells almost immediately, likely more often than not to scalper bots. What you can find “in stock” tends to be from recently established third-party marketplace sellers, with prices that can at times reach to double the official MSRPs.

Does that make the MSRPs meaningless? At present, it’s hard to think otherwise. Even Nvidia itself was only selling limited numbers of RTX 5090 Founders Edition and RTX 5080 Founders Edition cards at GTC 2025 — from a mobile ‘food truck.’ And you had to be a conference attendee ($1,145 minimum) plus get in line early enough to even grab one.

A better question: When if ever will we see the latest generation GPUs selling at MSRPs? In light of recent tariffs, plus the ongoing graphics card shortages, it could be a very long waiting game. Even looking to places like eBay, the number of latest generation GPUs trading hands doesn’t look promising.  

At the height of the cryptocurrency GPU mining crazy in mid-2021, we often saw well over 10,000 GPUs ‘sold’ via eBay every month. Right now, the last 30 days show less than 9,000 GPUs sold on eBay — and that’s looking at the past three generations of AMD and Nvidia graphics cards.

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Graphics Card Best Retail Price MSRP 30-Day eBay Average
GeForce RTX 5070 $600 * $550 $873
GeForce RTX 5070 Ti $940 * $750 $1,180
GeForce RTX 5080 $1,540 * $1,000 $1,707
GeForce RTX 5090 $3,999 * $2,000 $4,222
Radeon RX 9070 $869 * $550 $817
Radeon RX 9070 XT $940 * $600 $1,001
Intel Arc B570 $299 * $220 $230
Intel Arc B580 $396 * $250 $346
GeForce RTX 4060 $352 * $300 $309
GeForce RTX 4060 Ti $440 * $400 $421
GeForce RTX 4060 Ti 16GB $707 * $500 $566
GeForce RTX 4070 $847 * $550 $676
GeForce RTX 4070 Super $950 * $600 $765
GeForce RTX 4070 Ti $1,298 * $800 $777
GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super $1,300 * $800 $1,042
GeForce RTX 4080 $1,750 * $1,200 $1,256
GeForce RTX 4080 Super $1,798 * $1,000 $1,307
GeForce RTX 4090 $3,000 * $1,600 $2,156
Radeon RX 7600 $278 * $270 $243
Radeon RX 7600 XT $420 * $330 $363
Radeon RX 7700 XT $545 * $400 $448
Radeon RX 7800 XT $590 * $500 $589
Radeon RX 7900 GRE $918 * $550 $662
Radeon RX 7900 XT $930 * $750 $786
Radeon RX 7900 XTX $1,398 * $1,000 $1,075
Intel Arc A580 $279 * $180 $160
Intel Arc A750 $200 * $200 $186
Intel Arc A770 16GB $439 * $330 $297

* Price at time of writing, may not be a legitimate seller, price may change!

Here’s the best data we can come up with for the starting retail prices on the current and previous generation graphics cards from Nvidia, AMD, and Intel. You’ll note a bunch of asterisks in the price column; that’s to indicate resellers and prices where we’re not at all confident of the pricing or availability. These listings are all questionable, in our mind at least.

It probably goes without saying, but prices are in a rapid state of flux as well. If you find a price that’s $40 lower than other places, it’s not going to last long. Either the particular card and reseller will exhaust the inventory, or prices will get updated. And again, that’s assuming these prices are even legitimate in the first place. Some cards will show “typically ships in two weeks” or similar notes — not exactly confidence-inducing.

A safer look at prices right now might be eBay, as we’ve gathered data for the past 30 days of “sold” listings. Not all of those are guaranteed to be legitimate, but at least we can see solid numbers for how many of each card were sold as well as the average price. It doesn’t look good. 

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On the whole, outside of the RTX 50-series, eBay prices tended to be better on average compared to retail — which isn’t too surprising, since most prior generation GPUs are no longer readily available at retail. There are a few GPUs that averaged pricing below MSRP, but they’re all previous generation cards, and often models that weren’t exactly enticing originally.

Take the RTX 4070 Ti (aka, the rebranded unlaunched RTX 4080 12GB). People were outraged at its original $800 MSRP, but in the past month it averaged $777 for a used card on eBay. Intel’s Arc A-series GPUs are also selling below the original MSRPs, as is the RX 7600.