TC
The Comparator

GPU Value Calculator
Compare graphics cards by performance, price snapshots and value score

Total Cost of Ownership

A cheap GPU might cost you more in the long run. We factor in electricity costs over 3 years to show you the true price of hardware.

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New vs. Used

Should you buy new from Amazon or used from eBay? Add your own custom deals to the table and compare them against retail prices instantly.

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Personalized Ranking

Don't rely on generic "Top 10" lists. Adjust our sliders to prioritize what matters to YOU: Price, VRAM, Efficiency, or raw Performance.

How to find the best deal

1

Set Your Budget

Use the price filter on the left, or add your own listing to compare a marketplace deal against live retail offers.

2

Prioritize

Use the "Value Engine" sliders. Gamer? 100% Performance. Home Server? 100% Efficiency.

3

Analyze Value

Higher values indicate a stronger match under your current settings — the leader of the visible set reads 100. Click a row for detailed specs and ports.

Master Class

Detailed Guide: How to Find the Best Graphics Card

The GPU market is complex. Here is a step-by-step manual for turning The Comparator's data into your own decision — with your budget, your priorities and your prices.

🔥 Market Snapshot (2025/2026 Standards)

🎯 1080p Entry Level

Don't settle for less than 8GB VRAM. Look for deals on RTX 4060 or the newer RX 7600 XT series.

⚔️ 1440p Sweet Spot

The new standard. Target 12GB+ VRAM. Best value is often found in RTX 4070 Super or RX 7800 XT.

♻️ Used Market Kings

Previous flagships like RTX 3080 10GB offer insane value, but require a beefy PSU (750W+).

1

Analyze the "Perf. Index"

Stop comparing Teraflops or Clock Speeds. They don't mean anything across different architectures. We use a unified Performance Index based on real-world gaming benchmarks (1440p average).

  • 1000 pts: Baseline (RTX 4070 level). Great for 1440p.
  • 2000 pts: Twice as fast. 4K territory.
  • 500 pts: Good for 1080p Medium settings.
Performance Index Column
2

Don't Ignore Electricity (Op.Cost)

Op.Cost stands for Operating Cost. We calculate how much electricity the card will consume over 3 years (assuming 4 hours of daily use at $0.15/kWh).

Example: An old Vega 64 might cost $150 less to buy than a modern card, but it will consume $150 more in electricity. The real saving is zero. Always toggle "Include Op.Cost" to see the truth.
Op.Cost Toggle
3

Compare Local Deals

Found a listing on eBay, Facebook Marketplace, or Microcenter open-box? Don't guess if it's a good deal.

  1. Click "+ Add Your Item".
  2. Type the model name (e.g., "3080") and select it from the list to auto-fill specs.
  3. Enter the price you found.
  4. Check the "Is Used?" box in details to tag it.
Adding Custom Item

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about the methodology and data.

How exactly is the "Value Score" calculated?

The Value Score is an estimate from 0 to 100. It represents calculated value for the selected weights, current dataset and offer snapshots, not an official product rating.

Unlike simple "FPS per Dollar" charts, our engine uses a complex formula:
Score = (Performance Index × User Weights) ÷ Effective Price

Effective Price includes not just the purchase price, but also the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) - electricity costs over 3 years. This helps power-hungry cards compete on a more realistic cost basis. Finally, the score adapts in real time based on your sliders (for example, if you prioritize VRAM, cards with less memory may score lower). Read the full methodology.

What is the "Perf. Index" based on?

The Performance Index is an aggregated score derived from thousands of real-world gaming benchmarks reviewed by trusted tech outlets (such as TechPowerUp, Gamers Nexus, and Hardware Unboxed).

  • Resolution: We prioritize 1440p (2K) rasterization performance as the modern standard.
  • Baseline: The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 is calibrated to exactly 1000 points.

This allows for easy comparison: a card with 2000 pts is roughly twice as fast as a 4070, while a card with 500 pts offers half the performance.

Why should I care about Op.Cost (Electricity)?

Electricity is the "hidden tax" on your hardware. Older, cheaper cards often consume significantly more power than modern ones.

Op.Cost (Operating Cost) calculates the electricity bill for the card over 3 years, assuming average US pricing ($0.15/kWh) and 4 hours of daily gaming load.

Example: A used RTX 3080 ($400) might seem cheaper than a new RTX 4070 ($550). But the 3080 consumes ~120W more power. Over 3 years, that's ~$150 extra on your bill. The real price is almost identical.
How much VRAM do I actually need in 2025?

Video Memory (VRAM) requirements have skyrocketed. Running out of VRAM causes stuttering and blurry textures, regardless of how fast your chip is.

  • 8GB: The absolute minimum for 1080p. Already struggling in titles like Alan Wake 2 or Hogwarts Legacy.
  • 12GB: The new "Sweet Spot" for 1440p gaming. Safe for 2-3 years.
  • 16GB+: Required for 4K gaming, High-Res Texture Packs, and future-proofing.

Use our Min VRAM slider to filter out cards that won't last.

Is it safe to buy Used GPUs?

Buying used can save you 30-50%, but it comes with risks: no warranty, potential fan wear, or dried thermal paste.

How to check it yourself: a used deal usually needs a significant discount (often >30%) to outweigh the missing warranty — run the numbers for your case:

  1. Click "+ Add Your Item".
  2. Enter the price of the used card you found (eBay/Local).
  3. Check the "Is Used?" box (this sets Warranty to 0 in our calculation).
  4. See if the Value Score beats a brand new card with full warranty.
How often are prices updated?

We refresh supported-retailer offers as editorial snapshots, each shown with a "checked" timestamp. Prices can change at the retailer at any time — crypto-mining booms or AI hype can move them within hours.

Disclaimer: The price shown in our table is a snapshot — the lowest we recorded at the time noted. Always confirm the final price on the retailer's website before purchasing. You can manually edit the price in the table row to see the updated Value Score immediately.

Missing a model or a price source?

Our database is growing every day. If you found a bug, missing model, or just want to suggest a feature — we are listening.

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Deep dives

Value analysis by model — and head-to-head

Per-model pages with price targets, scenario scores and dated offers; versus pages score two products in one shared price frame.