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Market Analysis

AMD plans frustrating GPU chip change

Last updated: December 1, 2025 5:00 am
Published: 3 months ago
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Nvidia’s focus on data center gear leaves little room for gaming discounts as memory sets the pace.

AMD plans to boost the price of Radeon GPUs by 10% in early 2026, according to sources privy to the matter, capping a monumental 2025, and it’s not even Christmas.

As analysts and investors heaped praise on the semiconductor giant post Q3 2025 earnings, AMD CEO Lisa Su said:

“The demand for compute has never been greater,” according to Su, with AI demand “insatiable” at the moment.

It’s no wonder AMD isn’t slowing down. Instead, according to rumors from Tom’s Hardware, a price hike is on the cards in a year AMD surreptitiously paid more for parts to keep prices low.

The company’s first line of defense was internal; however, DRAM and VRAM prices have been too high for too long, which has hurt profits. Soon, higher costs will mean board prices go up, and gamers and PC builders will pay extra at the register.

Nvidia is also facing the same supply problems, but its situation is different. The data center giant is putting off launching new products for consumers instead of lowering prices in a memory market that is becoming tighter. Customers shouldn’t anticipate Nvidia to lower prices to get more market share while memory makers focus on AI-class parts.

AMD GPU price hike 2026: AI boom impact on GPUs and the DRAM price surge

The data center is the most important part. Hyperscalers are racing to train bigger models, which is making it hard to get HBM and DDR5 RDIMMs. This is pushing wafer starts and back-end capacity toward the products that make the most money. As fabs change their production to match that demand, consumer memory is tight, and desktop GPUs feel the hit right away.

That tilt has caused DRAM costs to go through the roof, and it has even affected GDDR6, the memory that drives today’s gaming PCs. Analysts now call the business a “memory bull market” since manufacturers are putting AI accelerators ahead of other parts. For gamers, the choice at the top means fewer sales, less stock, and prices that go up with each new shipment.

DRAM contract prices, GDDR6 price increase, and PC memory price trends

By the end of 2025, DRAM contract prices had gone up by three digits per year, and spot markets were going up as supply became tighter. Prices for GDDR6 rose by around 33% to 43% for all speeds and densities.

The next-gen GDDR7 pipeline stayed tight enough to keep pressure on current-gen parts. Retail shelves are behind contracts, but they do follow them. This implies that the prices clients pay in 2026 will be based on the current costs of the bill of materials provided by partners.

Consumer GPU market 2026: PC builders’ GPU upgrade math for AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT

Anyone who wishes to save money should not do it now. The Radeon RX 9070 XT came out on Black Friday at $599, which made high-end performance available to more builders for a short period. The card’s street price will probably go up to the low to mid-$600s when wholesalers reload their shelves at greater costs. This is before shops add their own pricing or local taxes.

Board partners have made it plain that “now’s the time to buy” if an upgrade was on the list before. DDR5 system memory is likewise falling behind. It hasn’t completely accounted for changes in contracts and spots yet, but it tends to go up in stages when older, cheaper stock is sold. Expect fewer doorbusters, more stable price floors, and a smaller difference between MSRP and what you really pay in 2026.

AMD financial performance Q3 2025: Gaming unit revenue and the Radeon GPU price increase

The data indicate why AMD can’t keep up with rising memory prices. In the third quarter of 2025, AMD sold $9.2 billion worth of goods. The GAAP gross margin was 52%, while the non-GAAP gross margin was 54%. These numbers are excellent, but they don’t leave much space for continuous subsidies in consumer graphics.

The Gaming segment, where GPU prices make an impact , made $1.3 billion, up 181% from the year before. This was mostly because of sales of Radeon and semi-custom goods. But that increase still needs to deal with input prices rising far quicker than normal seasonal pressure.

Passing on part of the cost keeps unit economics stable without the need to continually decrease prices to sell inventory. It also helps AMD’s partner ecosystem stay strong, because board makers have to cope with the same price hikes for memory and other parts. Changing the prices is a method to safeguard product cadence and channel health in a market where memory, not silicon, sets the pace.

Nvidia GPU pricing strategy: Data center revenue and its effect on gaming hardware inflation

Nvidia is with a bigger cushion, which is important for strategy. In the first quarter of FY26, the semiconductor giant produced $44.1 billion, with $39.1 billion coming from data centers. This made them quite likely to put AI accelerators ahead of mid-cycle consumer refreshes. If memory keeps running out, the best thing to do is to keep focusing on high-margin AI customers and stay away from aggressive gaming promotions that would cut revenues.

That position has an effect on the whole market. AMD doesn’t have to decrease its own pricing with massive sales since it doesn’t have a competition that sets prices. Stores don’t have to have big deals to acquire more consumers either. The end result is a consumer GPU stack that shows the real costs of materials instead of the cycles from the past two years, when prices were quite cheap.

Gaming hardware inflation: Key numbers on DRAM contract prices and GDDR6

* AMD GPU move: Radeon prices go up by around 10% in early 2026.

* By the end of 2025, contract prices for DRAM will have gone up by three times what they were the year before.

* GDDR6: rising by 33% to 43% in 2025

* Radeon RX 9070 XT: $599 on Black Friday; with the price bump, it will probably be in the mid-$600s.

Bottom line: Memory bull market and gaming hardware market analysis

The rise of AI isn’t only shattering records in data centers; it’s also transforming how consumers purchase and use computers, beginning with the memory bus. GPUs will be the first to change prices, as HBM, DDR5, and GDDR6 are all in high demand. RAM won’t be far after.

The Christmas window for 2025 would look better next to the shelf tags for 2026 if you’re planning a project. Investors should pay attention to how quickly memory costs decline in gaming relative to how long AI controls most of the supply.

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