Sell used NVIDIA H100 GPUs in bulk
A used NVIDIA H100 commonly resells for roughly $15,000–$28,000 per card — about 60–70% of new — with SXM5 modules clearing near $12,000–$22,000 on the secondary market. We buy H100s in bulk across the USA and Canada, take title, and resell globally. Drives are sanitized to NIST SP 800-88. Send your config and quantity for a firm bulk offer on inspection.
The H100 is still the most liquid high-end AI accelerator in the resale market, holding roughly 75–85% of value over the first 24 months — so timing is the single biggest lever on what you net. With the B200 generation reaching general availability, secondary H100 values are expected to soften by 10–20%, so a fleet sitting idle today is depreciating against a fixed event on the calendar.
Check current bands on our GPU resale value index, then run your quantity and form factor through the estimator for an indicative range — we firm it on inspection.
Indicative used value: commonly $15,000–$28,000 per card depending on form factor (SXM5 vs PCIe) 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: SXM5 modules carry more secondary demand than PCIe cards; HGX baseboards with 4–8 populated sockets move at a premium over loose modules.
- Memory: all H100s ship 80GB HBM, but verified-healthy memory with no ECC flags lifts offers over cards with logged errors.
- Condition: functional, throttle-free cards with clean thermal history beat units with reballed memory or damage.
- Quantity: bulk lots of 8/16/32+ matching cards command better per-unit pricing than mixed singles — buyers want deployable nodes.
- Sell timing: each next-gen launch (B200 GA) compresses H100 bands; selling ahead of the curve protects 10–20% of 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 H100 is not end-of-life — it remains in active demand and full support, and is the current workhorse for most deployed AI training clusters. Even as Blackwell ramps, H100 inventory stays liquid because most buyers can't get new allocation and will pay strong secondary prices for proven, deployable Hopper capacity. Value erodes on next-gen availability, not on any formal EOL.
What raises your offer
- Sell complete HGX nodes or matched 8-card sets rather than loose modules
- Include original baseboards, heatsinks and NVLink bridges
- Provide burn-in / health logs showing no HBM ECC errors or throttling
- Move larger matched quantities in a single lot
- Sell ahead of the next-gen launch curve, 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
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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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