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AMD and Intel CPU prices to rise in 2026 due to supply shortages and AI demand

The CPU market faces significant shortages, with prices expected to increase further in 2026 driven by AI growth and manufacturing limits.

person Redacción Tricuatro calendar_month 24 April, 2026 schedule 1 min read

The CPU shortage isn't limited to memory; it’s also pushing up prices for AMD and Intel processors. Since March, consumer CPU prices have risen between 5 and 10 percent, while server chips increased 10 to 20 percent. Industry sources warn of an additional 8 to 10 percent rise in the second half of 2026, with shortages expected to last until at least 2027.

The main driver is the surge in artificial intelligence applications, which has made CPUs crucial in data centers. Models like Claude, Gemini 3.1 Pro, GPT-5.4, and Kimi K2.6 perform complex tasks autonomously, increasing demand for traditional processors for vector searches and database queries. Production struggles to keep pace with this explosive demand.

AI demand has brought CPUs back into the spotlight in data centers, creating unprecedented pressure on the supply chain.

Another factor fueling price hikes is the concentration of chip manufacturing in advanced nodes. AMD and Intel currently produce in 3-nanometer processes, technology also used by AI accelerators, GPUs, and custom chips from tech giants. This creates a bottleneck in wafer production, raising manufacturing costs and, ultimately, processor prices.

By 2026, AMD plans two rounds of price increases for its server line, totaling around 16-17 percent. The company is transitioning to 2-nanometer processes with TSMC, adding further pressure to an already strained supply chain. Meanwhile, Intel adjusted CPU prices in March and April for PCs and servers and bought back nearly half of its Irish factory to gain more control over its manufacturing processes.

The crisis has reached a level where TSMC, the world’s largest semiconductor foundry, continues expanding its 3-nanometer production, despite typical slowdown in mature process investments. For consumers, this means that buying a processor in the coming months will likely be more expensive than today, making it a good idea to consider upgrading or building a new PC before prices rise further.

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