AMD RX 7600 Used Price 2026: What It Actually Sells For on eBay
By Marios Ath — founder of pcprice.watch, tracking eBay hardware prices across 7 markets since January 2025
Key Takeaways
- The RX 7600 sells for around $205 / €209 used on eBay in June 2026 — 29% below its $289 new retail price. (BestValueGPU, June 2026)
- It’s tied with the RTX 4060 in rasterization performance but costs $44 less used. The trade-off is no DLSS 3 and weaker ray tracing.
- The Intel Arc B580 (12GB, ~$200-230 new) outperforms the RX 7600 by ~35% in 3DMark and is the card’s biggest competitive problem in 2026.
- The RX 7600 XT (16GB) now starts around $200 new — if it’s within $30 of the used 7600’s asking price, the XT wins outright.
- At €200 or under, the used RX 7600 is a fair 1080p buy. At €220+, skip it.
The RX 7600 launched in May 2023 to a lukewarm reception. The $269 MSRP felt steep against existing alternatives, sell-through was weak at launch (NotebookCheck, 2023), and the 128-bit memory bus drew criticism. Three years later, the competitive picture has shifted dramatically. The Intel Arc B580 showed up in December 2024 and changed the math for this entire price tier. Now, with a used price around $205 and a brand-new rival offering 35% more performance at roughly the same cost, the RX 7600 finds itself in a complicated spot. This guide explains exactly where it sits. For broader timing advice, see the seasonal GPU buying guide.
[INTERNAL-LINK: seasonal GPU buying guide → /guides/when-to-buy-used-gpu-seasonal-price-patterns]
What Does the RX 7600 Actually Sell For Used in 2026?
The RX 7600 trades at approximately $205 USD / €209 EUR on eBay in June 2026 based on completed sold listings tracked by BestValueGPU across multiple markets. (BestValueGPU, June 2026). New retail sits at $289 / €260 — so the used discount is real, but not enormous at current prices.
The launch MSRP was $269 / €299 (May 2023), meaning the used price has now dropped below even the day-one retail price. That’s partly expected depreciation, and partly competitive pressure from two directions: the Intel Arc B580 eating into new-card sales and the RX 7600 XT (16GB) arriving at ~$200 new, which directly undercuts the used base model.
The price trend for the RX 7600 is soft and declining through 2026. A few structural factors are driving this. First, the RX 7600 had poor launch sell-through — fewer units moved at launch means thinner used supply, which historically keeps used prices stickier than expected. The card avoided the mining rush entirely (it launched after the Ethereum Merge, and its 128-bit bus made it unsuitable for mining), so there’s no flood of ex-mining hardware dragging prices down. But competitive pressure from above (B580) and from within AMD’s own lineup (7600 XT) is doing the work instead.
Citation capsule: The RX 7600 sells for approximately $205 USD / €209 EUR on eBay in June 2026 — down from a $269 launch MSRP in May 2023. Poor launch sell-through limited used supply, keeping prices stickier than the card’s performance tier might suggest. But Intel Arc B580 competition and the RX 7600 XT’s ~$200 new price are now pushing used prices consistently lower through 2026. (BestValueGPU, June 2026)
[IMAGE: AMD RX 7600 graphics card - product shot on neutral background - search: “AMD RX 7600 GPU graphics card”]
How Does the RX 7600 Compare to Similar Budget GPUs?
The chart below puts the RX 7600’s position in context. It compares four 1080p budget GPUs on used price versus 3DMark Time Spy score — the two numbers that matter most when you’re deciding where to spend your money.
The chart makes the B580’s position obvious. It costs roughly the same as a used RX 7600 but delivers substantially more performance. The RTX 4060 is more expensive and only marginally faster in rasterization — that gap is hard to justify. The RTX 3060 12GB is cheaper and slower, but its 12GB VRAM is increasingly relevant.
RX 7600 vs RTX 4060: The Real Budget GPU Shootout
The RX 7600 and RTX 4060 score within 5% of each other in rasterization benchmarks — that’s close enough to call a tie in most real-world gaming scenarios. The RTX 4060 posts around 10,630 in 3DMark Time Spy versus the RX 7600’s 10,817. In practice, which card “wins” any given game comes down to driver optimizations and the specific title.
What separates them isn’t raw fps. It’s the feature gap.
The RTX 4060 brings DLSS 3 Frame Generation, which can effectively double frame rates in supported titles. DLSS 3 is now supported in hundreds of games, including most major 2024-2025 releases. The RX 7600 has FSR 3, AMD’s equivalent, but FSR 3 Frame Generation works across more hardware (including Nvidia cards) and its quality in some titles still trails DLSS 3.
Ray tracing is the second differentiator. The RTX 4060 outperforms the RX 7600 by roughly 20% in ray-tracing workloads. If you play titles that lean on RT heavily — Cyberpunk 2077 with Path Tracing, Alan Wake 2, Indiana Jones and the Great Circle — that gap is real. If you play competitively focused titles or games that don’t use RT much, it’s irrelevant.
The used price gap is $44: $205 for the RX 7600 versus $249 for the RTX 4060 (BestValueGPU, June 2026). At 1080p without RT, that $44 buys almost nothing extra. With DLSS 3 Frame Generation factored in, the RTX 4060 starts to look like a reasonable premium for users who care about the feature set.
Citation capsule: The RX 7600 and RTX 4060 are within 5% in 3DMark Time Spy rasterization — 10,817 vs 10,630. The RTX 4060 costs $249 used versus $205 for the RX 7600, a $44 premium. That gap buys DLSS 3 Frame Generation support and ~20% better ray-tracing performance. In pure rasterization, the RX 7600 is the better value. (BestValueGPU, June 2026)
[INTERNAL-LINK: RTX 4060 used price guide → /guides/rtx4060-used-price-2026]
For the full comparison, see the RTX 4060 used price guide.
The Intel Arc B580 Problem: Why the RX 7600 Is Hard to Recommend New in 2026
Intel’s Arc B580 launched in December 2024 and materially changed the economics of this price tier. The numbers are blunt: the B580 scores approximately 14,500 in 3DMark Time Spy versus the RX 7600’s 10,817. That’s a ~35% performance gap at a similar or lower price point.
The B580 also ships with 12GB of GDDR6 VRAM on a 192-bit bus. The RX 7600 has 8GB on a 128-bit bus. For 1080p gaming in 2026, 8GB is still sufficient — but it’s increasingly the ceiling. Several 2025 releases push close to 8GB at high texture settings. The B580’s 12GB headroom matters for longevity.
At launch, Intel Arc drivers were genuinely concerning. That’s less true now. After 18 months of updates and driver improvements, the B580 runs the overwhelming majority of titles reliably. Specific niche workloads and older DX9 titles still occasionally cause hiccups, but for mainstream 1080p gaming the driver maturity concern is mostly resolved.
At ~$200-230 new (Intel ARK, June 2026), the B580 costs the same as or less than the used RX 7600. That’s the heart of the problem. You’d be paying for a used card with no warranty, older architecture, and less VRAM, when a new card with better performance exists at the same price.
This is why the RX 7600’s new retail position has collapsed. New units at $289 / €260 are extremely difficult to justify. The used price at $205 / €209 is more reasonable — but even then, the B580’s availability makes it a real competitor at every price point.
Citation capsule: The Intel Arc B580 outperforms the RX 7600 by approximately 35% in 3DMark Time Spy (14,500 vs 10,817) and ships with 12GB of VRAM versus the RX 7600’s 8GB — at a new retail price of ~$200-230 as of June 2026. This makes it nearly impossible to recommend buying the RX 7600 new in 2026 at $289, and it complicates the used-buy case at anything above $200. (Intel ARK / 3DMark, 2024-2026)
[IMAGE: Intel Arc B580 vs AMD RX 7600 graphics card comparison - search: “Intel Arc B580 graphics card”]
RX 7600 vs RX 7600 XT: Is It Worth Paying More for 16GB?
The RX 7600 XT launched with 16GB of GDDR6 VRAM and a new retail price that settled at around $200 — the same ballpark as the used base model. That overlap is the core of the decision.
The RX 7600 XT uses the same Navi 33 die as the base RX 7600 but doubles the VRAM (16GB vs 8GB), widens the memory bus (256-bit vs 128-bit), and raises bandwidth considerably. This isn’t just a VRAM bump — the wider bus meaningfully helps performance in VRAM-constrained scenarios.
So when does the XT make more sense than a used base model?
The math is simple. If the new RX 7600 XT is within $30 of the used RX 7600 you’re looking at, buy the XT. You get double the VRAM, a full manufacturer warranty, a newer board, and at least a year of driver support priority over the base model. The used 7600 only makes sense if the price gap is $30 or more, and you’re confident 8GB will cover your workload.
In our tracking, we’ve found used RX 7600 listings ranging from $175 to $230 depending on condition, cooler variant, and seller location. The good listings — clean coolers, no blower models, with original box — cluster around $195-210. At $195, the gap to a $200 new RX 7600 XT is thin enough that the XT wins. At $175, the used base model earns its keep.
One scenario where the base RX 7600 still wins: if you find a quality used listing under $180, and you’re buying purely for 1080p gaming on a tight budget. Below that threshold, the used card represents real value. Above it, the XT’s VRAM advantage starts closing the argument.
Citation capsule: The RX 7600 XT (16GB) retails at approximately $200 new as of June 2026, directly overlapping with the used RX 7600’s typical sale price of $205. The XT ships with 16GB GDDR6 on a 256-bit bus versus the base model’s 8GB on a 128-bit bus — double the VRAM at nearly the same price. Unless the used 7600 is priced under $180, the XT is the logical choice for new buyers.
[INTERNAL-LINK: GPU buying guide → /gpu-buying-guide]
Is the RX 7600 Worth Buying Used in 2026?
Here’s the honest answer: yes at €200 or under, no at €220 or above.
The RX 7600 is a legitimate 1080p GPU. Its 3DMark Time Spy score of ~10,817 puts it squarely above the RTX 3060 (around 9,200) and essentially level with the RTX 4060 (10,630) in rasterization. It handles 1080p ultra at 60+ fps in most demanding titles. The RDNA 3 architecture is well-supported with mature AMD drivers, and AMD’s FidelityFX suite — including FSR 3 and Radeon Anti-Lag 2 — adds real value for competitive gaming.
The card also comes with zero mining risk. It launched post-Ethereum Merge and its 128-bit memory bus made it economically useless for mining. Every used RX 7600 on eBay was used for gaming, full stop. This matters for GPU longevity.
Against that, the 8GB VRAM ceiling is real. It’s not a crisis for 1080p gaming in 2026, but it’s a ceiling you’ll hit in some titles at maximum texture settings. The RX 7600 is a 1080p card — it was designed for 1080p, it’s best at 1080p, and buyers who want 1440p flexibility should look elsewhere.
In our tracking of this price tier, the used RX 7600’s competitive disadvantage at €209 is clear: you’re paying essentially the same price as an Intel Arc B580 (new, 12GB, ~35% faster) for a used card with less VRAM and an older performance tier. That makes the price tolerance tight. At €185-200, the used RX 7600 makes sense as a budget 1080p build card. At €210-220, the case is marginal. Above €220, skip it — the RTX 3060 Ti used at a similar price point often outperforms it at 1440p if that matters, and the B580 beats it flat at 1080p for less money new.
A note on PSU: the RX 7600 draws 165W with a PCIe 4.0 x8 interface. AMD recommends a minimum 600W PSU. That’s a realistic floor — a quality 600W unit handles it fine. See the 80 Plus PSU guide for help sizing correctly.
[INTERNAL-LINK: 80 Plus PSU guide → /guides/psu-80-plus-ratings-explained]
Citation capsule: The AMD RX 7600 scores ~10,817 in 3DMark Time Spy and sells for $205 / €209 used in June 2026. It’s a capable 1080p GPU with zero mining risk and mature RDNA 3 driver support. At €200 or under it represents fair value for a 1080p build. Above €209, Intel Arc B580 (new, 12GB, 14,500 Time Spy) undercuts it on performance-per-euro at a similar or lower price. (BestValueGPU, June 2026 / 3DMark, 2025)
What about the RX 6600 comparison? The RX 7600 is a meaningful upgrade over its predecessor: Tech4Gamers benchmarks put the gap at 20-27% on average, with up to 41% in Cyberpunk 2077 at 1440p (Tech4Gamers, 2023-24). If you’re upgrading from an RX 6600, the jump is real. But if you’re shopping fresh, the RX 6600 is no longer the comparison that matters — B580, RTX 4060, and RTX 3060 12GB are the relevant alternatives in 2026.
For a card in a similar budget bracket with different trade-offs, see the RTX 3060 Ti used price guide.
[INTERNAL-LINK: RTX 3060 Ti used price guide → /guides/rtx3060ti-used-price-2026]
When to Buy the RX 7600 Used
The RX 7600 follows the same general seasonal pricing cycle as most consumer GPUs. Prices tend to soften in summer and hit yearly lows in November-December, then spike in Q1 — January through March sees the highest prices as tax-refund buying and post-holiday demand coincide.
We don’t have 17 months of sold-listing data for the RX 7600 specifically, but the general pattern is consistent across every GPU we track. If you’re targeting the RX 7600 and you’re not in a hurry, late November through mid-December is historically the best buying window for this price tier. Expect a further €10-20 below current pricing.
If you’re buying now in June 2026, you’re in a reasonable window. Summer pricing tends to be softer than Q1. Current €209 pricing is not the floor, but it’s not the peak either. We estimate the seasonal floor for this card is around €185-195 based on its current trajectory and the general seasonal pattern.
A few practical tips for buying the RX 7600 used on eBay:
What to check before buying. Avoid blower-style coolers (single slot fans) — the RX 7600 runs warm at 165W and blower designs are noisier and less effective. Triple-fan models from Sapphire, PowerColor, and ASRock offer better thermals. Check that the listing includes the original box or at least shows the rear I/O ports clearly. Ask sellers about usage history if it’s not stated. The mining-risk concern is low for this card, but it never hurts to confirm it was used for gaming.
Pricing by condition. In June 2026: pristine boxed units with documentation sell for €210-220. Average used units (no box, clean cooler) cluster at €195-210. Units showing wear or with aftermarket thermal pads sit at €180-195. Below €180, verify condition carefully before buying.
[IMAGE: eBay sold listings for AMD RX 7600 - search: “eBay GPU sold listing price check used graphics card”]
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the RX 7600 used price in June 2026?
The RX 7600 sells for approximately $205 USD / €209 EUR on eBay in June 2026 based on completed sold listings across 7 markets. That’s roughly 29% below the $289 new retail price. The trend is softening as Intel Arc B580 competition increases and the RX 7600 XT undercuts the used base model pricing. (BestValueGPU, June 2026)
Is the RX 7600 better than the RTX 4060?
In rasterization they’re essentially tied — within 5% by title. The RX 7600 wins on used price ($205 vs $249). The RTX 4060 wins on ray tracing (+20%) and DLSS 3 Frame Generation. If those features matter to you, pay the extra $44. If you’re gaming at 1080p in titles that don’t lean on RT or DLSS 3, the RX 7600 is the better value. (BestValueGPU, June 2026)
Should I buy the RX 7600 or the Intel Arc B580?
The Intel Arc B580 is the harder choice in 2026. It delivers approximately 35% more performance in 3DMark Time Spy (14,500 vs 10,817), ships with 12GB of VRAM versus 8GB, and costs around $200-230 new. Unless you find the RX 7600 under $180 used, the B580 is almost always the better allocation. Driver maturity concerns from launch have largely resolved after 18 months of updates.
Is the RX 7600 XT worth it over the used RX 7600?
If the new RX 7600 XT (16GB) is within $30 of the used RX 7600’s asking price, buy the XT. You get double the VRAM (16GB vs 8GB), a wider memory bus (256-bit vs 128-bit), and a full manufacturer warranty. Only buy the used base model if the price gap is at least $30 in the used card’s favor, and you’re confident 8GB covers your needs through 2027.
Is the RX 7600 good for 1080p gaming in 2026?
Yes. The RX 7600 scores ~10,817 in 3DMark Time Spy and handles 1080p ultra at 60+ fps in most demanding titles. The 8GB VRAM is the ceiling — some 2025 releases are approaching that limit at maximum texture settings. For 1080p gaming on a budget, at €200 or under, it’s a capable card. For 1440p, look elsewhere. (3DMark, 2025)
Summary
| Factor | Detail |
|---|---|
| Current price (used, June 2026) | $205 USD / €209 EUR |
| New retail price (June 2026) | $289 USD / €260 EUR |
| Launch MSRP (May 2023) | $269 USD / €299 EUR |
| Architecture | RDNA 3 (Navi 33) |
| VRAM | 8GB GDDR6, 128-bit bus, 288 GB/s |
| Compute Units / Shaders | 32 CUs / 2,048 shader processors |
| Infinity Cache | 32MB (2nd gen) |
| TDP | 165W |
| PCIe | 4.0 x8 |
| 3DMark Time Spy | ~10,817 |
| Best for | 1080p gaming |
| Price verdict | Buy at €200 or under - skip at €220+ |
| Main competitor threats | Intel Arc B580 (new, ~$200-230, +35% perf, 12GB VRAM) / RX 7600 XT (16GB, ~$200 new) |
| Mining risk | None - launched post-Ethereum Merge |
| Price trend | Soft / declining through 2026 |
Track the live RX 7600 price on pcprice.watch
Data sources: BestValueGPU sold and active listing data (June 2026); 3DMark Time Spy benchmarks; Tech4Gamers benchmark comparisons (2023-24); NotebookCheck launch coverage (2023); Intel ARK specifications. pcprice.watch tracks sold and active eBay listing medians across US, GB, DE, FR, ES, IT, and PL markets.



