Nvidia GPU Prices Compared
Nvidia RTX 40-series GPUs range from $269 for the RTX 4060 to $1,999 for the RTX 4090. Newegg, Amazon, and Micro Center offer the most competitive prices — Micro Center in-store often beats online by $20–$50.
About Nvidia GPU
Popular models: RTX 4060 ($269, 1080p), RTX 4070 Super ($599, 1440p), RTX 4080 Super ($999, 4K), and RTX 4090 ($1,999, enthusiast).
Best deal: The RTX 4060 Ti ($399, often $349 on sale) is the best price-performance GPU for 1080p high-refresh and 1440p medium settings — a significant step up from the base 4060.
Premium pick: The RTX 4070 Ti Super ($799) delivers near-4090 performance in rasterization at half the price — the best GPU for 4K gaming under $1,000.
How to pick a tier: Choose your card around the resolution you game at. The RTX 4060 / 4060 Ti tier is built for 1080p high-refresh play; the 4070 / 4070 Ti Super tier is the 1440p sweet spot; and the 4080 Super and 4090 target 4K and heavy ray tracing. VRAM matters as much as the chip — 8GB is increasingly tight for newer titles at high textures, so 12GB or more is the safer choice if you plan to keep the card for several years. Also confirm your power supply: the 4070 wants a 650W PSU and the 4090 an 850W unit, ideally with a native 16-pin connector.
When prices drop: Prior-generation cards fall noticeably whenever a new generation launches, and current-gen cards see their best sale pricing during Black Friday and back-to-school. A GPU is only half the equation — pair it with a matching gaming monitor so you can use the frames, or compare a complete gaming laptop if portability matters more than upgrade headroom.
Where to Buy Nvidia GPU
Nvidia GPUs are sold at Newegg, Amazon, Micro Center, Best Buy, and B&H Photo, and identical cards often differ by $20–$50 between them. The comparison above covers the major retailers so you can review options before buying.