The AI boom has driven demand for high-performance processors to levels that are pushing prices up across the market as data centers and cloud providers compete with consumers for the same silicon. Against that trend, Intel is moving in the opposite direction on the Core Ultra 7 270K. Amazon currently has it at $279, down from its regular $357, the lowest price this processor has reached and a notable cut on Intel’s current flagship mainstream desktop CPU.
24 cores, 5.5GHz boost, PCIe 5.0, and DDR5
The Core Ultra 7 270K runs 24 cores across eight performance cores and 16 efficiency cores, which is the architecture Intel uses to handle both single-threaded peak performance and sustained multi-threaded workloads simultaneously without thermal throttling on one to benefit the other. The eight P-cores boost to 5.5GHz max turbo frequency, which delivers the responsiveness that gaming, content creation, and professional software demand from single-core speed. The 16 E-cores handle background tasks, multitasking, and threaded workloads in parallel without competing with the P-cores for thermal headroom.
The LGA1851 socket on Intel 800 Series chipset motherboards unlocks PCIe 5.0 connectivity, which doubles the bandwidth of PCIe 4.0 for compatible NVMe drives and discrete GPUs. DDR5 support up to 7200 MT/s keeps memory bandwidth ahead of what the previous generation could deliver, which reduces bottlenecks in memory-intensive workloads like video editing, 3D rendering, and large dataset processing. The unlocked multiplier on Z-series chipsets allows overclocking for enthusiasts who want to push past the stock boost clock, and the 125W base power with 250W max turbo gives the processor the thermal budget to sustain high-intensity workloads without backing off.
For anyone building or upgrading a desktop PC for gaming, content creation, or AI workloads that run locally rather than in the cloud, the 270K is the current-generation mainstream flagship that covers every demanding use case without stepping up to HEDT pricing.
AMD’s Ryzen 9 9900X, the most direct competitor at a similar core count and price point, typically sits at $350 to $400 at regular retail. The Intel Core Ultra 7 270K at $279 undercuts that range while delivering comparable multi-core performance and better single-core boost speed for the gaming and lightly threaded workloads where peak clock speed matters most. With 4.5 stars from 50 early reviews and more than 500 units sold last month, the record low price on a current-generation flagship desktop processor is unusual enough to be worth acting on.