Sell used NVIDIA H200 GPUs in bulk
A used NVIDIA H200 commonly resells around $28,000–$35,000 for PCIe and $32,000–$45,000 for SXM5, with full DGX H200 systems trading near $400,000–$500,000. We buy H200s 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 H200 is the newest entrant on the resale market — a first-mover opportunity with very few competing buyback pages and pricing that isn't yet commoditized. Strong, scarce and in demand, it holds value well today, but it's also the most volatile band on the board because B200 availability sits right behind it.
Pull current bands from our GPU resale value index and run your quantity through the estimator for an indicative range — we firm it on inspection.
Indicative used value: commonly $28,000–$35,000 (PCIe) and $32,000–$45,000 (SXM5) per card depending on condition and quantity — 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 and populated HGX baseboards out-price PCIe cards; complete DGX H200 systems command system-level premiums.
- Memory: H200's expanded HBM3e capacity is the headline feature — verified-healthy memory is critical to top-band pricing.
- Condition: as a near-new part, clean cards with minimal runtime and no faults sit at the top of the range.
- Quantity: matched node-level lots are far more deployable and price well above loose cards.
- Sell timing: highest volatility on the board — the B200 ramp can move H200 bands fast, so the window matters.
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 H200 is current-generation and nowhere near EOL — it's actively shipping and in high demand. Its resale value rests on scarcity: buyers who can't secure new allocation will pay strong secondary prices for deployable H200 capacity. The honest risk isn't obsolescence, it's volatility — B200 availability can reprice the band quickly, so value is highest now while supply is tight.
What raises your offer
- Sell complete DGX H200 systems or matched HGX nodes for system-level pricing
- Include all baseboards, NVLink hardware and original cooling
- Provide health and runtime logs proving minimal use and clean HBM
- Move matched node-level quantities in one lot
- Sell while H200 supply is still tight — ahead of B200 normalization
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 H200 worth?
Should I sell my H200 now or hold?
Do you buy loose H200 cards or full DGX H200 systems?
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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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