Here’s Every NVIDIA RTX 50 GPU Available Below MSRP, Get A Brand New Gaming & DLSS 4 Ready Graphics Card Right Now!

Hassan Mujtaba
NVIDIA's Entire GeForce RTX 50 Family Now Showing Up In Steam Hardware Survey, Total Share Reaches 3.69% Since Launch

NVIDIA's entire RTX 50 GPU lineup is now available below or at MSRP, making now a perfect time to upgrade your graphics card.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 GPU Prices Roundup: All Cards Available In Stock At or Below MSRP: Double-Digit Discounts on Majority & 5090 At $1999 MSRP

It's been almost 9 months since the first GeForce RTX 50 GPUs hit the shelves. The first of these was the high-end NVIDIA RTX 5090 and RTX 5080, followed by the RTX 5070 Ti, 5070, 5060 Ti, 5060, and lastly, the RTX 5050. All of these graphics cards have seen discounts every now and then, but more recently, we can find a continued stream of discounts below MSRP, which means that now is the perfect time to upgrade your PCs if you have been waiting to get a new Blackwell graphics card infused with DLSS 4.

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Starting at the entry-level, the RTX 5050 8 GB GPU has dropped by 4% to $239, which is a decent price, though its 8 GB VRAM is very lacking, and the Arc B-series offerings, such as the 12 GB B580 and the 10 GB B570, make for a better option. Still, it's an entry-level product, and if you are accustomed to NVIDIA's ecosystem, then it could fit your needs for 1080p gaming.

RTX 5050 8 GB ($249 US MSRP)

Next up is the RTX 5060 8 GB graphics card, which has seen a price reduction of up to 10%. The lowest listed price is $269.99 US, and we expect it to drop further in the coming months as supply improves. It also features a lack of 8 GB VRAM, which is only good for up to 1080p gaming.

RTX 5060 8 GB ($299 US MSRP)

The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 Ti continues the 8 GB GPU spree, but with a higher core configuration, it can manage decent performance at 1080p than the 5050 and 5060. This card has the widest availability throughout the RTX 50 series and has various discounts starting at 1.3% and up to 10.5%. The lowest price currently is $339.99 US.

RTX 5060 Ti 8 GB ($379 US MSRP)

The RTX 5060 Ti breaks away from the 8 GB curse and doubles the VRAM to 16 GB. The card has seen the highest price cut at Microcenter, starting now at $369.99 US, a 13.9% drop versus the MSRP. This is good, but once again, we want to see this price drop around $339-$349 for it to see better adoption, but at this price, it makes little sense to go for an 8 GB 5060 Ti variant priced around a similar range.

RTX 5060 Ti 16 GB ($429 US MSRP)

NVIDIA's RTX 5060 12 GB GPU sees decent discounts in the sub-$500 range, marking a 12.7% decline over the MSRP. The lowest price is offered by Microcenter at $479, while Walmart has several GPUs listed at $499 US.

RTX 5070 12 GB ($549 US MSRP)

The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti doesn't have many models below MSRP, with just two available at their lowest of $729 US, a 2.6% decline versus MSRP. There are several 5070 Ti cards available at MSRP, though none of which are positioned against the RX 9070 XT, which is around the same price range.

RTX 5070 Ti 16 GB ($749 US MSRP)

The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 is also available below MSRP with a nice 10% discount at $899 US. All custom variants were around $1200-$1400 US a few months back, but things have started to settle, and many cards are now available at MSRP.

RTX 5080 16 GB ($999 US MSRP)

Lastly, we have the flagship and ultimate gaming graphics card, the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090, which can now be bought at MSRP. This is good news, as the cards were priced above $2200-$2500 a few months back. There are still certain premium models that are priced around $2500-$3000 US, but it's good to see that MSRP models are now in stock.

RTX 5090 32 GB ($1999 US MSRP)

As you can tell, NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 50 GPUs are now ample and available in stock with discounts offered across major US retailers. The prices will continue to drop in the coming months, but don't take that as an indication of any new cards arriving soon. The RTX 50 "SUPER" series is expected but won't launch until next year. So if you can't wait, now is a good time to consider upgrading your PCs.

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Hassan Mujtaba Photo

About the author: A Software Engineer by training and a PC enthusiast by passion, Hassan Mujtaba serves as Wccftech's Senior Editor for hardware section. With years of experience in the industry, he specializes in deep-dive technical analysis of next-generation CPU and GPU architectures, motherboards, and cooling solutions. His work involves not only breaking news on upcoming technologies but also extensive hands-on reviews and benchmarking.

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