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Intel Reportedly Planning Another CPU Price Increase in May Amid Massive Demand

The total cumulative goal for the price hike is about 30% higher compared to 2025 pricing. Interestingly, Intel is facing a significant problem with CPU supply that it can’t address immediately. While a large portion of CPU production is internal, with Intel Foundry handling a bulk of orders, some CPUs require TSMC’s silicon for Intel to ship these CPUs. Especially with multi-die packaging, where some parts are manufactured on Intel’s node and others on TSMC’s node, shipping is impossible until every part arrives and Intel assembles it with its advanced packaging.
The demand driving these CPU orders is largely from AI data centers, which are now purchasing so many CPUs that barely any are left. For example, in the initial AI data center buildout wave, the majority of server infrastructure spending was on GPUs, which outnumbered CPUs by more than 12 GPUs per single CPU on average. However, this number has risen significantly due to the increased compute needs and the way modern AI is utilized, pushing the CPU-to-GPU ratio to 1:8, with some estimates suggesting it could go as high as 1:4—four GPUs per single CPU socket. This translates to a multi-fold increase in CPU demand, where AMD, Intel, and other Arm-based players can’t keep up. Intel is addressing this with some pricing adjustments as CPUs become harder to access, while manufacturing is slowly picking up pace.










