Nvidia’s New GPUs Are Expensive, Hard to Find, and Getting Worse
To anyone within earshot of my office window, I sincerely apologize for the unfiltered frustration you just heard. But if you were in my shoes—staring down the insanely high price tags of Nvidia’s new RTX 5090 and RTX 5080—you’d probably be swearing up a storm too.
Nvidia’s RTX 5090 starts at a jaw-dropping $2,000, making it the most expensive consumer graphics card in history. Meanwhile, the RTX 5080 sits at $1,000, and that’s if you can even find one. Custom versions from MSI, Asus, and others are quickly pushing past $3,000, and some luxury-tier models exist purely for those with bottomless wallets. And if you’re hoping to snag one at retail, good luck—stock is scarce, and scalpers are charging absurd premiums that rival used car prices.
Why Are GPUs So Expensive Right Now?
It’s a perfect storm of problems:
- Sky-high demand meets tight supply – Nvidia can’t produce enough next-gen GPUs to satisfy eager gamers.
- AI is consuming the GPU market – Large companies are buying hundreds or thousands of cards at a time for AI training, pricing out regular consumers.
- Scalpers and scammers are back – The resale market is flooded with overpriced listings, and fake sellers are taking advantage of desperate buyers.
- Prices are already rising further – Tom’s Hardware reports that MSI and Asus have already raised GPU prices by $140 to $200, just a week after launch.
If you thought launch prices were bad, prepare yourself—they’re only going to climb higher.
Tariffs Are Pushing U.S. Prices Even Higher
Adding insult to injury, U.S. tariffs are making everything worse. A 10% import tax on Chinese goods is hitting PC components, GPUs, and even cars, meaning costs are rising across the board. And with possible tariffs on Taiwan, Canada, and Mexico still looming, we could see even steeper price hikes soon.
Are There Any Affordable Alternatives?
If you’re unwilling to sell a kidney for an Nvidia GPU, here are some other options:
- AMD’s Radeon RX 9070 & 9070 XT (coming in March) could provide a better price-to-performance balance.
- Intel’s Arc GPUs are shaping up to be strong contenders in the midrange market.
- Cloud gaming through GeForce Now or Xbox Game Pass Ultimate is a viable alternative to buying new hardware.
- Integrated graphics are improving, with AMD’s Ryzen APUs showing surprising gaming potential.
GPU Shortages Are Back—And They’re Here to Stay
If this feels like a repeat of the GPU crisis during the pandemic, that’s because it basically is. With AI companies hoarding GPUs, tariffs driving up prices, and scalpers making matters worse, things aren’t likely to improve soon.
For now, I’ll be holding onto my RTX 3070 and waiting out the storm. If you’re looking for an upgrade, brace yourself—because things are about to get even worse before they get better.