What's your PC worth?

Choose the parts you own — including discontinued ones — and see what each currently lists for on the used market, part by part. Real listings for your exact models, summarized into an honest range, with a straight path to putting that value toward an upgrade.

What you have

CPURequired
Choose a CPU
MotherboardRequired
Choose a motherboard
RAMRequired
Choose a RAM
Graphics CardRequired
Choose a graphics card
StorageRequired
Choose a storage
Power SupplyRequired
Choose a power supply
CaseRequired
Choose a case
CPU Cooler
Add a CPU cooler to swap

Add-ons

Optional extras — priced into your total, never into compatibility or the build score.

Monitor
Add a monitor to swap

Used-market value

How this estimate works

For each part you choose, we pull the current used listings for that exact model — filtering out bundles, "for parts" units, and accessory noise, and counting delivered price (item + shipping). The range spans the 25th percentile to the median of those asking prices, and a part needs at least 8 solid listings before it counts toward the combined total, so one weird listing can't skew your number. Asking prices run higher than final sale prices, which is why we show a range instead of pretending to know a single magic figure.

Used PC value FAQ

How much is my used PC worth?
It depends almost entirely on the parts inside — the graphics card alone usually carries 40–60% of a gaming PC’s resale value, with the CPU next. Choose the parts you own above and we’ll show what each one currently lists for used, plus a combined range for the whole rig.
How does UFDForge estimate used value?
We look at current eBay listings for your exact model — bundles, broken "for parts" units, and accessory junk filtered out, shipping included — and summarize them into a range from the 25th percentile to the median asking price. A part needs at least 8 solid listings to count toward the total, and every figure carries a freshness stamp.
Are these the prices parts actually sell for?
Not exactly — they’re asking prices, what sellers are currently listing at, and most parts change hands below asking. That’s why we show a range instead of a single number and suggest treating the low end as the realistic ballpark. The figures are market context, not a promise.
Why do whole PCs list for less than the sum of their parts?
Used buyers pay a premium for individual GPUs and CPUs — those parts hold their value far better than cases and power supplies — so complete towers typically list at a discount to their combined part values. That’s also why we break the estimate down part by part instead of quoting one whole-rig number.
Is upgrading smarter than starting over?
Often, yes — if your rig has one weak link, replacing just that part beats replacing everything. The UFDForge upgrade advisor uses these same used-market figures to show the real net cost of an upgrade once the part it replaces finds a new home.
More tools: PC upgrade advisor · Bottleneck calculator · FPS calculator · PSU wattage calculator · PC builder