eBay Historical GPU Prices 2023: November 2023 Update

Here's the unedited July pricing update (posted at the start of August).

GPU prices continued to drop compared to the previous month, though the rate of decrease slowed quite a bit. Where average GPU prices dropped by 14% in June, they only fell 6% in July. That's perhaps partly because of a modest rebound in cryptocurrency prices, though with an average income of just $2.50 per day on an RTX 3090 Ti or RTX 3090, it would require about 500 days to break even.

Buying a used graphics card has some risks, so we don't strongly encourage people to go the used route. Still, if you're comfortable servicing a card or potentially returning it for a refund, there are some decent deals to be had.

We're now at the point where 18 of the 21 current generation graphics cards are selling on eBay for less than their official MSRPs. The last remaining holdouts are the RTX 3060 Ti, RTX 3060, and RTX 3050, which were perhaps priced too aggressively to begin with. Everything else is anywhere from a few percent below MSRP, to as much as 30% below MSRP in a few cases. Here's the overview of eBay GPU sales for the month of July 2022.

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Nvidia Ampere and AMD RDNA2 GPUs: eBay Pricing for July 2022
GPUAvg eBay PriceQTY SoldRetail PriceLast PriceMonthly ChangeFPS/$
GeForce RTX 3090 Ti$1,45280$1,400$1,538-5.6%0.0912
GeForce RTX 3090$1,057828$1,204$1,098-3.7%0.1198
GeForce RTX 3080 Ti$901432$950$956-5.8%0.1370
GeForce RTX 3080 12GB$773101$799$835-7.4%0.1611
GeForce RTX 3080$6961186$800$728-4.4%0.1670
GeForce RTX 3070 Ti$593549$674$620-4.4%0.1755
GeForce RTX 3070$4881459$550$518-5.8%0.2046
GeForce RTX 3060 Ti$4371428$471$461-5.1%0.2093
GeForce RTX 3060$355478$390$379-6.2%0.1978
GeForce RTX 3050$288116$300$304-5.4%0.1785
Radeon RX 6950 XT$8439$1,000$1,069-21.2%0.1629
Radeon RX 6900 XT$697160$749$767-9.0%0.1860
Radeon RX 6800 XT$615188$670$625-1.5%0.2009
Radeon RX 6800$513149$580$551-6.9%0.2159
Radeon RX 6750 XT$5053$500$513-1.6%0.2005
Radeon RX 6700 XT$393518$449$407-3.3%0.2434
Radeon RX 6650 XT$35933$340$368-2.3%0.2223
Radeon RX 6600 XT$285423$330$299-4.5%0.2736
Radeon RX 6600$235275$260$258-8.7%0.2833
Radeon RX 6500 XT$16244$168$171-5.2%0.1905
Radeon RX 6400$1577$140$1532.5%0.1506

You can see the month-to-month change in GPU prices on eBay, alongside the current retail prices. Obviously, retail has the advantage of guaranteeing you a brand-new graphics card, whereas eBay usually means used cards. Currently, retail prices are 7% higher on average, though several GPUs (RTX 3090 Ti, RX 6750 XT, RX 6650 XT, and RX 6400) are cheaper at retail.

It's unusual to see changes in MSRPs for graphics cards, particularly from Nvidia, but the highest priced Nvidia GPUs (3090 Ti, 3090, 3080 Ti) are no longer able to justify their extreme pricing. Unofficially, at least, it seems Nvidia has given its partners the option to reduce prices on those cards quite a bit. The flip side is that the three least expensive Nvidia cards — RTX 3050, RTX 3060, and RTX 3060 Ti — are the only current generation GPUs that are still selling above MSRP on eBay.

Overall, Nvidia's average eBay price is 6% below MSRP across all ten of its Ampere GPUs. AMD has substantially lower pricing, both for comparatively equal performance as well as relative to MSRPs. The average eBay price for AMD's RDNA 2 GPUs currently sits at 17% below MSRP.

As we've said before, while these prices might feel tempting, we expect additional price drops in the coming months. After that, all bets are off as we should hopefully see Nvidia Ada and AMD RDNA 3 GPUs enter the market. We'll continue to see the current generation parts alongside the newcomers, but that will mostly be in the midrange and budget sectors.

The monthly volume of GPUs sold on eBay dipped slightly, down 1.4%, but that's close enough to a tie. Nvidia's numbers were down 3%, while AMD's were up 5%, at least on eBay, suggesting more people are starting to give AMD a shot.

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Nvidia Turing and AMD RDNA GPUs: eBay Pricing for July 2022
GPUAvg eBay PriceQTY SoldLast PriceMonthly ChangeFPS/$
GeForce RTX 2080 Ti$517328$564-8.2%0.1855
GeForce RTX 2080 Super$403188$407-0.8%0.2105
GeForce RTX 2080$347203$348-0.4%0.2371
GeForce RTX 2070 Super$322402$342-5.8%0.2375
GeForce RTX 2070$286227$310-7.7%0.2372
GeForce RTX 2060 Super$276173$298-7.4%0.2356
GeForce RTX 2060$227522$241-5.7%0.2435
GeForce GTX 1660 Ti$183225$200-8.5%0.2392
GeForce GTX 1660 Super$186608$201-7.4%0.2389
GeForce GTX 1660$173133$174-0.1%0.2301
GeForce GTX 1650 Super$151111$171-12.1%0.2205
GeForce GTX 1650$149237$155-4.2%0.1790
Radeon RX 5700 XT$276856$314-12.1%0.2667
Radeon RX 5700$257164$286-10.0%0.2523
Radeon RX 5600 XT$194260$215-9.6%0.2993
Radeon RX 5500 XT 8GB$16031$174-8.5%0.2497
Radeon RX 5500 XT 4GB$14929$156-4.4%0.2240

Getting a previous generation card basically requires you to go through eBay or some other secondhand market, as very few of these cards are available at retail. The exception, sort of, are Nvidia's GTX 16-series parts, which also have a (very sluggish and overpriced) GTX 1630 as a new option. Our review will be up soon, but as  you'd guess by the reduction in GPU cores and memory interface width, there's not much reason to spend basically as much on a GTX 1630 as you'd pay for a GTX 1650 (GDDR6 version, even).

Prices on Turing and RDNA 1 GPUs dropped again, by 8% on average, while the number of GPUs sold on eBay shot up 26% compared to last month. Still, the total number of previous generation GPUs sold on eBay is only 4,700 — a drop in the bucket compared to the retail GPU market.

As with last month, AMD's RX 5700 XT, RX 5700, and RX 5600 XT saw the biggest price cuts, but only by around 10–12% this time. The GTX 1650 Super also saw a decent 12% dip in pricing, which finally puts it below Nvidia's official MSRP — and about $50 below the typical price of a brand-new GTX 1630. If you're after a decent budget option, the GTX 1650 Super is one of the few instances where buying a used card still makes more sense then getting a new card.

July GPU Pricing Summary: The Deluge

Flooded cars, like a flood of used graphics cards

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

The supply and pricing on used graphics cards has certainly become more enticing in recent months. If you're willing to set a lower maximum, it's quite easy to pick up a card via an auction for even lower prices — that's what "average pricing" means, after all. A bit of cleaning, some new thermal pads, and some testing is potentially all that stands between you and a high performance GPU. Or you could get unlucky and end up dealing with a return, which tends to favor buyers on eBay so it's not too bad.

Still, buying a used graphics card comes with some risks. We'd assume any GPU with 6GB or more VRAM was mining for the past year or more. If you take the chance on a used card, be sure to thoroughly test it, and buy from someone that offers returns.

Nvidia's upcoming RTX 40-series Nvidia Ada GPUs are starting to hit the rumor mill hard. It's possible some of the "leaks" are just guesses, but some of the more reputable Twitter people have started posting information. For example, one recent leak suggests the RTX 4070 Ti will match or exceed the RTX 3090 Ti in performance — not too surprising, given the same thing happened with RTX 3070 and RTX 2080 Ti. Though the rumored specs on the 4070 Ti suggest Nvidia has seriously overhauled the architecture, possibly with lots of extra cache.

AMD's RDNA 3 hasn't been doing the rounds quite as much, so we figure it's still a few months out. It will likely arrive in November, two years after the RDNA 2 cards launched. AMD's use of chiplets will be very interesting to see in action, as that could make or break the design.

While waiting for the next-gen GPUs to launch does make sense, we also have to point out how much scalpers affected pricing on the early RTX 30-series and RX 6000-series launches. Even before cryptocurrency mining really killed retail availability, scalpers were marking up cards by 50% or more in late 2020. Let's hope Ada and RDNA 3 don't repeat that pattern.

Jarred Walton

Jarred Walton is a senior editor at Tom's Hardware focusing on everything GPU. He has been working as a tech journalist since 2004, writing for AnandTech, Maximum PC, and PC Gamer. From the first S3 Virge '3D decelerators' to today's GPUs, Jarred keeps up with all the latest graphics trends and is the one to ask about game performance.

  • JarredWaltonGPU
    FYI, we're reorganizing some things and have a new forum thread here. Old comments were here: https://forums.tomshardware.com/threads/the-gpu-sadness-index-tracking-ebay-pricing.3689998/
    That is all. :cool:
    Reply