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Here’s when you can buy AMD’s Ryzen 7 9850X3D and how much it’ll cost

AMD’s near-flagship 3D V-Cache CPU launches late January with a competitive sub-$500 MSRP

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A render of a Ryzen 9000 CPU.
AMD

AMD has finally confirmed pricing and availability for its Ryzen 7 9850X3D processor, the company’s newest near-flagship desktop CPU aimed at gaming enthusiasts. The chip will officially launch on January 29th with an MSRP of approximately $499 USD, according to AMD’s latest announcement.

The world’s most advanced gaming processor just got faster.

AMD Ryzen™ 7 9850X3D
Available Jan 29th | $499

Built for gamers who demand smooth, relentless performance when it matters most. pic.twitter.com/xtfH0lg7X2

— David McAfee (@McAfeeDavid_AMD) January 22, 2026

The 9850X3D was first unveiled at CES 2026 as part of AMD’s expanding Zen 5 with 3D V-Cache family, and it slots in just below higher-tier Ryzen 9 models in the 9000 series. Compared with its predecessor, the Ryzen 7 9800X3D, the 9850X3D gains a higher boost clock of up to around 5.6 GHz, while continuing to offer eight cores, 16 threads, and a stacked cache design that helps improve gaming performance.

What This Means for Gamers and Builders

The key attraction of X3D-equipped CPUs like the 9850X3D is their use of vertical stack cache, which places extra L3 cache closer to the processor cores. This architecture reduces memory latency and, in many gaming scenarios, can translate into noticeably smoother performance, especially at 1080p and other common competitive resolutions.

Priced at roughly $499, the 9850X3D sits about $20 higher than the outgoing 9800X3D, making it a modest step up in cost for tighter clock performance. AMD positions this part as a compelling mid-to-high-end option for builders who want strong gaming results without moving into flagship Ryzen 9 territory. For enthusiasts focused on balanced all-around performance, the 9850X3D strikes a sweet spot: it offers faster gaming than the outgoing model, without the steep price premium of top-tier CPUs.

With RAM and storage prices still climbing, it’s refreshing to see AMD keep the price bump on the CPU side relatively modest, especially since they already confirmed price hikes coming to the GPU side of things. That said, anyone building a new PC will still be thinking carefully about where their money goes. The good news is that the Ryzen 7 9850X3D is compatible with existing AM5 platforms, allowing many current AMD users to upgrade without purchasing a new motherboard. Taken together with its strong gaming focus and sensible pricing, the 9850X3D shapes up as a noteworthy addition to AMD’s gaming lineup for 2026 and beyond.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
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