The RTX 30-series launched in late 2020. Most cards are now 4–5 years old — old enough to depreciate significantly, but not so old they're worthless. The used market in 2026 is interesting because AI demand is inflating some cards (the ones with lots of VRAM) while others have settled at predictable resale values.
RTX 30-series used prices — May 2026
| GPU | Used Price (eBay sold) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| RTX 3090 Ti | $1,200 | AI/ML demand for 24GB VRAM |
| RTX 3090 | $1,050 | Same — 24GB VRAM still sought-after |
| RTX 3080 Ti | $460 | 12GB, holds well |
| RTX 3080 10GB | $305 | Solid 1440p card, good demand |
| RTX 3070 Ti | $270 | 8GB VRAM starting to feel tight |
| RTX 3070 | $225 | Still capable at 1440p |
| RTX 3060 Ti | $205 | Popular budget 1080p/1440p option |
| RTX 3060 12GB | $250 | 12GB VRAM boosts it above the 3060 Ti |
| RTX 3050 | $95 | Entry level, limited demand |
Why the 3090 and 3090 Ti are worth more than ever
This surprises most people. The RTX 3090 launched at $1,499 in 2020 — and five years later it's selling used for over $1,000. The reason: 24GB of GDDR6X VRAM. In 2026, running large language models locally requires VRAM. The 3090 and 3090 Ti are among the cheapest consumer cards that can run meaningful AI workloads. Demand from hobbyist AI users keeps the price high.
Should you sell your 30-series now?
If you have a 3090 or 3090 Ti: probably not yet. The AI VRAM premium may hold or grow. For everything else — 3080 and below — now is a reasonable time. These cards are still useful but the gap between them and 40-series cards is widening. In another year, demand will soften further.
Use our free valuation tool to get an exact estimate for your full system, or reach out directly if you want a human opinion.