PC makers face shortages of Intel and AMD CPUs that stretch up to six months — lead time for orders jumps from just two weeks in the face of AI demand

The AMD Ryzen 7 9850X3D CPU sitting on the PMD2 power tester.
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

PC makers are facing new challenges as the memory and storage chip shortage is now being compounded by a lack of supply of Intel and AMD CPUs. According to Nikkei Asia, some manufacturers like HP and Dell are now saying that the number of processors that get delivered to them no longer matches the required volume, with some sources saying that the situation is getting worse compared to some months back. This shortage is causing prices to increase, with costs rising by an average of 10% to 15%, if not more. More importantly, orders are also facing delays, with lead times jumping from around a couple of weeks to six months in some cases.

“Previously, the average lead time for a CPU was around one to two weeks, but now the wait time has prolonged to an average of eight to 12 weeks,” one server manufacturer executive told Nikkei Asia, while another one said that this could extend up to six months. Furthermore, other industry sources expect this to become much worse in the second quarter of 2026, and PC makers can’t solve the problem by throwing cash at it. “If money can solve the problem, that would be great,” an executive for a gaming PC brand told the publication. “What we worry about is that even if we pay more, we still cannot get more. The CPU shortage is getting more serious day by day, no less than the memory chip situation.”

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Jowi Morales
Contributing Writer

Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.

  • PSUpower
    First, it was the GPUs, then the RAM... Now, it's consumer processors... Just wondering; is there a PC component, whose price will remain unaffected by the surge in AI demand?
    Reply
  • CelicaGT
    Well, OpenAI is shutting down Sora....with conflicting reasons stated but anyone paying attention knows why. Cost. It costs more to run this stuff than they can reasonably charge and if they pull the rug (charge the full amount) engagement will evaporate. Long and short of it is that I don't think this (AI bubble) can reasonably go on much longer, things like these shortages, the Iran war and the general state of the global economy are all major factors adding to the cost to run.
    Reply
  • Roland Of Gilead
    TBH, I'm not at all surprised. IMO, this is just more price gouging from companies, tech or not, when consumers are already pushed to the limit on expenses, cost of living and affordability. There's a bit of an inflection point right now, where the rich and poorest are ever further apart from each other than ever before. This forced poverty affects far more people who are barely making it through from week to week or month to month in terms of income.

    Yes, supply chains or market conditions can change, but it's always the general consumer getting tapped for this crap.
    Reply
  • Stomx
    PSUpower said:
    First, it was the GPUs, then the RAM... Now, it's consumer processors... Just wondering; is there a PC component, whose price will remain unaffected by the surge in AI demand?
    The answer is already in the question: PSU :)
    They are even in average falling for ~3 kW power range ( they were near $1000 in October)
    Reply
  • beyondlogic
    PSUpower said:
    First, it was the GPUs, then the RAM... Now, it's consumer processors... Just wondering; is there a PC component, whose price will remain unaffected by the surge in AI demand?
    Short answer no

    Nvme / ram/ CPUs / GPU.
    Reply
  • InfiniteWeatherMan
    PSUpower said:
    First, it was the GPUs, then the RAM... Now, it's consumer processors... Just wondering; is there a PC component, whose price will remain unaffected by the surge in AI demand?
    Ironically, CPU coolers and even AIOs haven't been largely affected by this AI surge, mainly because there's few electronic components that are in these products. In fact, they might be slightly (by a few dollars) cheaper because of the drop in copper prices as of late in the stock market..
    Reply
  • usertests
    CelicaGT said:
    Well, OpenAI is shutting down Sora....with conflicting reasons stated but anyone paying attention knows why. Cost. It costs more to run this stuff than they can reasonably charge and if they pull the rug (charge the full amount) engagement will evaporate. Long and short of it is that I don't think this (AI bubble) can reasonably go on much longer, things like these shortages, the Iran war and the general state of the global economy are all major factors adding to the cost to run.
    I'd love to see some cost estimates for Sora operation. There are open source video generation models that can run on a single GPU, but I assume Sora used more resources.

    Google seems to be pushing ahead with video gen and making something professionals would pay for. Then there's ByteDance, etc. I'm not reading too much into the death of Sora, but low revenue, high competition, and copyright/trademark liability may have done it in. The capability isn't going away though.

    2026-2027 is a very exciting time for the world. However, I think the AI bubble may not pop soon if enough useful, revenue generating models can be deployed. The kind of stuff that will result in more job losses (without the sheepish rehiring later).
    Reply
  • JeffreyP55
    Admin said:
    Many PC manufacturers are facing challenges in acquiring inventory of Intel and AMD CPUs, saying that there is not enough supply to meet consumer demand.

    PC makers face shortages of Intel and AMD CPUs that stretch up to six months — lead time for orders jumps from just two weeks in the face of AI demand : Read more
    The way things (prices) are going, no new PC for at least five years. Maybe longer. People have lost their minds paying 3k-4k for video cards that will be obsolete within a year or so.
    Reply