Here’s a rare moment of cheer in these generally bleak times for PC gaming hardware. UK retailer Overclockers has just knocked down the prices of several Nvidia GeForce RTX 5000-series GPUs, up until 23 May 2026, enabling you to grab a graphics card for a reasonable price. In fact, some of them are even going below MSRP.

Asus GeForce RTX 5060 Ti Dual OC 8GB
£419.99 £299.99
“Provides a solid upgrade path to those still rocking GeForce RTX 30 Series SKUs such as RTX 3060 Ti and even RTX 3070. The fresh face on the scene respectively pushes past what came before by 29% and 19% on average.” – Read our review.
The top deal here is the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060 Ti, which is currently going for just £299.99 if you buy this Asus card from OcUK. Sadly, it’s not the version with 16GB of VRAM, but that’s not surprising considering the current chaos surrounding DRAM prices.
However, at this price, the 8GB frame buffer is much less of an issue. At £299.99, you’re saving a good £120 compared to OcUK’s recent pricing, and £50 from Nvidia’s original MSRP for this card. That buys you a decent amount of GPU power, with 4,608 CUDA cores, for the price you’d have paid for an RTX 5060 recently.

Asus GeForce RTX 5060 Dual OC 8GB
£319.99 £259.99
“I like a lot of what this graphics card offers, particularly how much of a performance improvement it is over RTX 4060.“ – Read our review.
Speaking of which, the equivalent Asus Dual RTX 5060 card also has a decent discount now. The RTX 5060 launched at an MSRP of £279, but you can now save £20 on this cost and pick one up for £259.99. As with all the 8GB cards we’ve tested lately, it’s worth bearing in mind that this amount of VRAM limits the settings you can enable compared to having a 16GB card. However, given the massively increasing cost of the latter, as a result of the ongoing DRAM shortage, this 8GB card offers comparatively decent value.

Palit GeForce RTX 5050 Dual OC
£248.99 £218.99
“A welcome return from Nvidia to the $250 price point.” – Read our review.
Another card that’s now cheaper than Nvidia’s original MSRP, despite current price pressures, is this Palit RTX 5050 model, although only by a solitary pound. This card launched at £220, but generally hovers around the £249 mark these days. Thankfully, you can now pick one up for just £218.99. You’re not going to find a current-gen desktop GPU for a cheaper price than this, and while its performance doesn’t set the world alight, it covers all the essentials if you want to build a budget gaming PC.
Overclockers has knocked down prices of several higher-spec GPUs as well, although many of the discounts are proportionally smaller. That said, given the current state of the graphics card market, these prices are much better than those we’ve seen lately. One example is this Zotac RTX 5070 card, which is currently going for £509.99, saving you £30 over the MSRP, even though it’s not the lowest price we’ve seen for this GPU.

Zotac GeForce RTX 5070 Twin Edge 12GB
£539.99 £509.99
“All five GPCs (Graphics Processing Clusters) are up and active, with 48 streaming processors and ray tracing cores doing most of the heavy lifting.” – Read our review.
This card gives you a bit more memory with which to play, upping the total to 12GB of GDDR7 VRAM. That’s still below the 16GB you’d ideally expect at this price, but we don’t live in normal times any more. At £509.99, the RTX 5070 gives you a decent amount of GPU power, and just enough memory to get by.
There is another good deal if you want more memory, though, thanks to AMD’s competition. You can pick up a PowerColor Radeon RX 9070, complete with 16GB of VRAM, for just £518.99, saving you £11 on the MSRP. That’s a solid discount on a 16GB graphics card in a time when memory is priced ridiculously, and while it doesn’t have the benefits of Nvidia’s DLSS 4.5 ecosystem, complete with multi-frame gen, it gives you a decent GPU and plenty of memory for a reasonable price.

PowerColor AMD Radeon RX 9070 16GB
£569.99 £518.99
“For those with no more than £529 / $550 to spend, Radeon RX 9070 comes heartily recommended” – Read our review.
There are some other discounted cards as well, although they’re only really deals in relation to recently hiked prices, as a result of the memory crisis, so they’re higher than MSRP. It’s all relative, though, and at £790.99, this Palit RTX 5070 Ti card offers a decent amount of VRAM, with 16GB of GDDR7 memory, as well as a very powerful GPU. If you can’t afford that, this Asus 9070 XT card offers pretty good value at £619.99, offering a GPU that’s not far behind in terms of performance, as well as 16GB of VRAM.
Check out our guide to buying the best GPU if you want to see which graphics cards we recommend buying right now, as well as our 9070 XT vs 5070 Ti card if you’re currently weighing up your options.

