Sell used NVIDIA A100 80GB GPUs in bulk
A used NVIDIA A100 80GB commonly resells in the $4,800–$18,900 range depending on form factor and condition, retaining roughly 60–80% of value — still the best-value AI GPU on the secondary market. We buy A100s in bulk across the USA and Canada, take title, and resell globally. Attached drives are sanitized to NIST SP 800-88. Send config and quantity for a firm bulk offer on inspection.
The A100 80GB is the volume mover of the used AI-GPU market. With H100 supply easing and Blackwell arriving, A100 bands are expected to ease a further 10–15% through 2026 — but demand stays deep because it remains the most cost-effective trainable card most buyers can source in quantity. The SXM4 80GB clears fastest.
Pull live bands from our GPU resale value index and run your lot through the estimator for an indicative range — we firm it on inspection.
Indicative used value: commonly $4,800–$18,900 per card depending on form factor (SXM4 vs PCIe, 40GB vs 80GB) and condition — indicative, firm on inspection. Want a number for your exact unit? Try the instant estimator → or get a firm bulk offer →
What drives the value
- Form factor: SXM4 80GB is the volume mover and clears fastest; PCIe and 40GB variants sit at the lower end of the band.
- Memory: 80GB cards command a clear premium over 40GB; verified-healthy HBM lifts offers.
- Condition: functional, throttle-free cards with clean logs beat units with HBM faults or thermal history.
- Quantity: matched 8-card sets and HGX baseboards beat loose singles on per-unit price.
- Sell timing: bands ease ~10–15% through 2026 — moving volume earlier protects value.
Component value breakdown
On this platform, value is spread across the chassis and what's inside it — the processors, memory and drives often carry more than the bare unit:
Relative contribution to a typical configured unit — illustrative, not a quote.
Typical depreciation pattern
Hardware sheds value every quarter it sits. Selling earlier in the curve recovers materially more:
Illustrative depreciation pattern for this class of system — not a quote.
End-of-life / value status
The A100 is mature but far from worthless — it remains in heavy production use across training and inference fleets and trades actively because it's the most affordable serious AI GPU buyers can source in bulk. NVIDIA's lifecycle is winding down on new sales, but secondary liquidity stays strong; value declines gradually with each new generation rather than dropping off a cliff.
What raises your offer
- Sell SXM4 80GB modules in matched sets rather than mixed form factors
- Include HGX baseboards, heatsinks and NVLink hardware
- Provide health logs confirming no HBM ECC errors
- Consolidate into larger single-lot quantities
- Move volume ahead of the 2026 softening, not after
Related
Compare AI accelerators: H100 · A100 · H200 · L40S · read the H100 vs A100 vs H200 resale comparison · see the GPU resale value index.
Questions sellers ask
What is a used A100 80GB worth?
Is the A100 still worth selling in 2026?
Do you buy loose cards or complete nodes?
Do you buy 40GB A100s and older Ampere stock?
How is data handled?
What's the minimum and how fast?
Turn surplus into cash.
Bulk lots only — lots, racks, pallets, reels. Tell us what you're holding and we'll come back with a firm bulk offer.
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