We all saw this coming from miles away. Intel has bumped up the official pricing for its Core Ultra 7 270K Plus and Core Ultra 5 250K Plus, and it didn’t bother to make an announcement about it.
Spotted by leaker harukaze5719 on X and confirmed on Intel’s own ARK product pages, the 270K Plus now carries a “Recommended Customer Price” of $339 to $349, up from its March launch price of $299. The 250K Plus jumped from $199 to a $219 to $229 range.
That works out to roughly a 16% hike on the 270K Plus and 15% on the 250K Plus. We had already flagged Intel’s earlier round of Arrow Lake Refresh price increases just 48 hours after launch, so this latest bump means these chips have moved twice on pricing in under four months.
This isn’t happening in isolation either. Intel already pushed through a 10% hike across its consumer lineup back in March, and reports pointed to a third round of increases arriving in May, bringing the cumulative jump for 2026 to around 30%. AMD hasn’t sat this one out either, in case you’re wondering. Ryzen pricing followed with its own 15% increase starting in April, after Intel’s initial 10% hike set the tone. So at this point, it’s less a story about one chip family and more about where the entire CPU market is heading this year.
The reasoning behind all this keeps circling back to the same problem: memory and fab capacity are being eaten alive by AI infrastructure demand. DRAM contract prices have been climbing for months, and recent research shows DRAM surged nearly 90% quarter over quarter in Q2 2026 alone, dragging RAM, SSDs, and now CPUs along with it.
Data centers are also pulling more CPU capacity than they used to, with the CPU-to-GPU ratio in AI servers tightening as inference workloads scale up, leaving less silicon and fab time for consumer desktop chips. Intel already warned previously that rising AI datacenter demand will lead to a CPU shortage for the consumer segment, as agentic AI is moving closer and closer to a 1:1 ratio between CPUs and GPUs.

For anyone building a budget PC, this closes the gap that made Arrow Lake Refresh appealing in the first place. These two chips launched specifically to undercut AMD’s Ryzen 5 9600X and Ryzen 7 9700X, and the 9600X itself sits at $239 after a recent price cut, making it a genuine value alternative once again. If AMD holds that pricing while Intel keeps creeping upward, budget builders may simply drift back toward Ryzen.
Retail hasn’t fully caught up to Intel’s new range yet, with Amazon still listing both chips below the updated ARK prices, so there’s a window before shelf prices actually reflect this change. Whether that window closes quietly or with another headline, it’s probably worth assuming CPU prices aren’t done moving this year.
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[PC Hardware Specialist]
Usman Saleem brings 8+ years of comprehensive PC hardware expertise to the table. His journey in the tech world has involved in-depth tech analysis and insightful PC hardware reviews, perfecting over 6+ years of dedicated work. Usman’s commitment to staying authentic and relevant in the field is underscored by many professional certifications, including a recent one in Google IT Support Specialization.
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