AMD X870 motherboards listed overseas start at $350 — premium X870E models may retail close to $800
Are you ready to pay top-dollar for AMD X870 motherboards?
Prominent hardware leaker momomo_us just posted on X (formerly Twitter) the prices of the upcoming X870 and X870E motherboards from Asus. With the launch of the 800-series AMD chipsets just around the corner, with some speculating that it will happen on September 30, distributors and retailers likely already know how much these boards will cost.
However, it seems that momomo_us discovered the prices on an overseas retailer — likely from Europe — as the prices are set in Euros. We’ve already seen the specifications of nine new Asus X870 motherboards, so these are the expected prices for some of these boards. They also shared the list’s expected launch price of a Gigabyte X870 motherboard.
We estimated the U.S. dollar prices from the Euro value using the current exchange rate of €1 to $1.10 and saw substantial increases in the expected launch prices of these new motherboards. The leaker didn’t specify whether the prices include VAT (value-added tax). Remember that hardware is usually more expensive outside the U.S. market, with some countries slapping VAT as high as 20% on hardware.
Header Cell - Column 0 | Expected Launch Price (EUR) | Expected Launch Price (USD) | Header Cell - Column 3 | Launch Price (USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Asus ROG Crosshair X870E Hero | 704.52 | 781.28 | Asus ROG Crosshair X670E Hero | 649.99 |
Asus ROG Strix X870-F Gaming WiFi | 489.9 | 543.27 | Asus ROG Strix X670E-F Gaming WiFi | 389.99 |
Asus ROG Strix X870-A Gaming WiFi | 455.4 | 505.02 | Asus ROG X670E-A Gaming WiFi | 369.99 |
Asus ProArt X870E-Creator WiFi | 547.2 | 606.82 | Asus ProArt X670E-Creator WiFi | 459.99 |
Asus Prime X870-P WiFi | 328.44 | 364.22 | Asus Prime X670-P WiFi | 219.99 |
Asus Prime X870-P | 314.16 | 348.39 | Asus Prime X670-P | 299 |
Gigabyte X870 Aorus Elite WF7 Ice | 353.85 | 392.4 | Gigabyte X670 Aorus Elite AX | 259.99 |
The top-end Asus ROG Crosshair X670E Hero had a launch price of nearly $650. However, the X870E version of this mobo would now retail for $781.28. Even the more affordable Asus Prime X670-P, retailing for $299, jumps by about $50 for the X870 version, assuming that these numbers are accurate.
This price increase is the opposite of what happened to the Ryzen 9000 chips that these motherboards will support. The latest AMD processors had a lower launch price than their Ryzen 7000 predecessors, while the X870 motherboards may retail for higher prices, assuming the leaked pricing isn’t just a placeholder.
However, this increase in retail prices will follow the trend with Intel’s Arrow Lake chips, which will also appear to have higher launch prices, provided that the numbers we saw are accurate. With the launch of the X870 chipsets expected to arrive this month, we only have to wait a few more weeks to know their actual launch prices. At the very least, these leaked numbers will give us a ballpark figure on what to prepare if we want to upgrade our motherboards and get the most out of AMD’s Ryzen 9000 processors.
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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.
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mangaTom With global recession and a very stale reception of the 9000 series, I don't understand the logic of board makers jacking up the prices of these boards. You could buy a relatively cheap motherboard for am5 now. All of this just for usb4 and and wifi 7? Nope. Also isn't x870 just an up tiered b650e? Now I'd pay premium prices for a b650e class motherboard if I want to get one. Nope. Finally b840, a literally worse than a620 board. I know I love to clown on intel because of their practices but amd is almost just as scummy and bad.Reply -
Notton
Don't buy it then, it's not for you.mangaTom said:All of this just for usb4 and and wifi 7
USB4 signal requires better (more expensive) circuit traces for the higher frequencies, just like PCIe5.0 and DDR5.
WiFi7 cards are straight up more expensive than WiFi6 or 6E.
If you don't need that stuff, you don't even need an X670.
AMD R7 CPUs haven't require over-designed VRMs on X-series chipset mobos since 3000 series.
A mid-range B650 with a not-crap VRM design has more than enough robustness for an 7800X3D or future 9800X3D. -
RCJ "Some countries slapping VAT as high as 20% on hardware". Oh please, I wish it was that low where I live.Reply -
Alvar "Miles" Udell The problem I see is that as TH pointed out a few months ago, AMD has now extended Socket AM5 until 2027, so we're now effectively in the middle of AM5's life.Reply
Ryzen 9000 isn't that impressive over previous generations, existing boards are no performance slouches and support Ryzen 9000 and future CPUs, and PCIe 6 is on the horizon. What's the incentive for people to drop upwards of the better part of $800 on a X870E motherboard compared to waiting for next year's? -
LabRat 891 At this rate, I'll still be on X570 with a 5800x3d as 2030 rolls around.Reply
Suddenly, "AM4ever" isn't so jovial... -
Makaveli I wanted to go AM5 800 series chipset when I upgrade but they are going to jack the prices on those to the sky.Reply
So looks like I may be going to ASUS Prime X670E-PRO WIFI -
NickyB Completely not worth it. Too much for too little. Looks like my X670-P board will be here for a while.Reply -
Hotrod2go
What good is PCIe 6 ? even PCIe 5 is useless except in niche storage scenario. There are not even PCIe 5 gpu cards yet. Zen 5 is impressive with energy efficiency at a given clock speed, that's not progress is it? & lets not mention the faster level 1,2 & 3 cache speeds will we? also the Microsoft shenanigans affecting early reviews.Alvar Miles Udell said:The problem I see is that as TH pointed out a few months ago, AMD has now extended Socket AM5 until 2027, so we're now effectively in the middle of AM5's life.
Ryzen 9000 isn't that impressive over previous generations, existing boards are no performance slouches and support Ryzen 9000 and future CPUs, and PCIe 6 is on the horizon. What's the incentive for people to drop upwards of the better part of $800 on a X870E motherboard compared to waiting for next year's? -
Dementoss
Do you really think, the kind of people who spend that much on motherboards, are actually bothered?Alvar Miles Udell said:What's the incentive for people to drop upwards of the better part of $800 on a X870E motherboard compared to waiting for next year's?
I've been a member of a computer forum, here in the UK for many years, that has a member marketplace, where it is not unusual to see high-end kit, only months old, offered for sale due to further upgrading. -
stuff and nonesense
Depends what you are replacing. It’s pretty pointless upgrading by one generation unless there is a huge change, 10% is unlikely to be seen.Alvar Miles Udell said:Ryzen 9000 isn't that impressive over previous generations
Replacing a 5900x.. maybe. 3900x, that’s a different story, the performance jump is huge.
It is incredible that people treat these marvels of engineering in such a dismissive way. Coordinating the signals being switched by billions of transistors to get a result is not a trivial task, manufacturing the chips with components that are less than 10nm is mind boggling.