Used H100 vs A100 vs H200 — resale value (2026)
In 2026, used NVIDIA AI GPUs span a wide resale range: the A100 80GB commonly trades around $4,800–$18,900, the H100 around $15,000–$28,000, and the newer H200 around $28,000–$45,000. All three hold value well near-term, then step down sharply when the next generation ships in volume — so sell-timing, not just spec, decides what you net on a bulk lot. Firm bulk offer on inspection.
Resale value bands at a glance (2026)
The three current-demand NVIDIA AI accelerators occupy distinct resale tiers. The A100 is the affordable volume mover, the H100 is the most liquid high-end card, and the H200 is the scarce newcomer commanding top prices while supply stays tight. All figures are indicative secondary-market ranges — every bulk lot gets a firm offer on inspection.
| GPU | Indicative used band (per card) | ~24-mo retention | Sell-timing signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| A100 80GB (SXM4 / PCIe) | ~$4,800 – $18,900 | ~60–80% | Eases ~10–15% through 2026 — move volume earlier |
| H100 (SXM5 / PCIe) | ~$15,000 – $28,000 | ~75–85% | B200 GA expected to push values −10–20% — sell ahead of the curve |
| H200 (PCIe / SXM5) | ~$28,000 – $45,000 | Holds while scarce | Most volatile — value highest now while supply is tight |
Indicative ranges only — never guaranteed. Firm bulk offer on inspection.
How each card behaves on the secondary market
- A100 80GB — the best-value AI GPU on the secondary market and the deepest pool of demand; the SXM4 80GB is the volume mover. Bands ease ~10–15% through 2026, so it rewards selling sooner.
- H100 — the most liquid high-end card; holds ~75–85% over 24 months, but B200 general availability is expected to compress bands 10–20%. The window against that launch is the biggest lever.
- H200 — the newest entrant; strong and scarce, holding value well today, but the most volatile band because B200 sits directly behind it. Value is highest now while new allocation is hard to source.
When to sell
Across all three, the pattern is identical: strong near-term retention, then a sharp step-down once the next generation ships in volume. The calendar — not the spec sheet — is your main lever.
- Sell ahead of next-gen GA, not after. B200 availability is the event that reprices H100 and H200 bands.
- Move A100 volume early in 2026. The expected easing rewards consolidating and selling now.
- Sell H200 while supply is tight. Scarcity is doing the price-support work; it won't last.
- Consolidate into matched lots. Node-level and matched-set quantities price well above loose mixed cards.
Check live bands on the GPU resale value index and run your lot through the estimator. We buy in bulk across the USA & Canada, wipe attached drives to NIST SP 800-88, and resell globally — firm bulk offer on inspection.
Related guides
More on selling surplus, used and end-of-life IT hardware in bulk: What is my used server worth? · How to sell surplus IT hardware in bulk · Server EOL and EOS — and why it still sells · Data wiping explained: NIST SP 800-88 · What determines your used server's value · What is your data-center hardware worth at decommission? · Buyback desk, marketplace, or recycler — where should you sell?. When you are ready, run the instant value estimator for an indicative range, or send your asset list to get a firm bulk offer — one buyer, the whole lot, drives wiped to NIST SP 800-88.
ServerBuyback is a USA & Canada wholesale buyback desk: we buy surplus, used and end-of-life IT hardware and electronics in bulk, take title, and resell through a global B2B channel. Questions about your specific lot? Talk to the desk →
Questions sellers ask
Which holds value best — H100, A100 or H200?
Should I sell my H100s before the B200 launches?
Is the A100 still worth selling in 2026?
How do I get a firm price for a mixed GPU lot?
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