RTX 5090 in Australia March 2026 Pricing Stock Reality
RTX 5090 in AU is scarce and overpriced
Australia has RTX 5090 stock. Barely. And if you find one, you will pay a premium that feels detached from reality.

For GPUs, CPUs, memory, AI workstations, and wider compute trends, see Compute Hardware in 2026: GPUs, CPUs, Memory & AI Workstations.
RTX 5090 stock availability in Australia
Let us be blunt: the RTX 5090 is not “out of stock everywhere”, but it is effectively scarce.
Across major Australian retailers:
- Some models are listed as in stock, but only a handful at a time
- Most SKUs are sold out or flip between in stock and gone within days
- High end variants dominate availability, not entry models
For example:
- Scorptec shows multiple RTX 5090 listings, but most are sold out with only occasional stock appearing
- Umart and Mwave still carry limited inventory, but only a few models are actually purchasable at any given time
This creates a strange situation:
- Technically available
- Practically hard to buy at will
Real wait times
If you are not lucky:
- Restock cycles feel like 2 to 6 weeks
- Popular models disappear within hours or days
- Preorders are quietly back without strong visibility
This mirrors global trends where RTX 5090 stock vanished quickly after demand spikes in early 2026
RTX 5090 pricing in Australia right now
Here is where things get painful.
Typical street prices (March 2026)
From real retailer listings:
- Entry level AIB cards: ~5999 AUD
- Mid range premium cards: 6300 to 6500 AUD
- High end OC or liquid cooled: 6500 to 7500 AUD
Even within a single retailer:
- Same GPU silicon
- Price swings of 1000+ AUD depending on cooling and branding
Compared to official pricing
- Official starting price was about 4039 AUD
- Real world pricing is now 50 to 80 percent higher
This is not normal inflation. This is structural scarcity plus margin stacking.
Why RTX 5090 is still expensive and scarce
1. AI demand is eating supply
Blackwell is not just a gaming GPU.
- AI workloads
- Local LLM inference
- Enterprise spillover demand
Gamers are competing with developers and businesses.
2. GDDR7 and bleeding edge silicon constraints
5090 depends on:
- New memory supply chains
- Advanced packaging
These are not scaling fast enough.
3. AIB partner pricing strategy
Board partners learned from previous cycles:
- Launch high
- Stay high
- Discount later (maybe)
Right now, there is zero incentive to reduce prices.
4. Australia tax and logistics penalty
Australia always pays more:
- Import costs
- Smaller allocation pools
- Currency effects
So shortages hit harder locally.
Should you buy RTX 5090 in March 2026
Opinionated answer: only if you absolutely need it.
You are paying:
- Early adopter tax
- Supply chain tax
- Hype tax
The only rational buyers:
- AI developers needing local compute
- High end creators
- People upgrading from very old GPUs (like 20 series or earlier)
Everyone else is subsidising Nvidia margins.
RTX 5080 Super and RTX 6000 series expectations
RTX 5080 Super
Rumors and historical patterns suggest:
- Release window: late 2026
- Likely improvements:
- Higher clocks
- Faster GDDR7 bins
- Better efficiency
But do not expect miracles. It will be a refinement, not a revolution.
RTX 6000 consumer series
Looking further:
- Expected timeframe: 2027
- Likely direction:
- Stronger AI acceleration baked in
- Better perf per watt
- Possible shift toward chiplet style GPUs
The bigger question is pricing, not performance.
If Nvidia keeps current strategy:
- RTX 6090 could launch even higher than current 5090 street prices
The uncomfortable prognosis
The GPU market has changed.
What used to be:
- Launch spike
- Then price normalization
Is now:
- Launch spike
- Then sustained high plateau
Unless one of these happens:
- AMD delivers real high end competition
- AI demand cools down
- Supply massively increases
Do not expect RTX 5090 prices in Australia to drop meaningfully in 2026.
Related GPU and RAM pricing in Australia
Earlier checks on the same cards and retailers, plus paired RAM moves for build totals:
- GPU and RAM Prices Surge in Australia: RTX 5090 Up 15%, RAM Up 38% - January 2026
- NVidia RTX 5080 and RTX 5090 prices in Australia - November 2025
- NVidia RTX 5080 and RTX 5090 prices in Australia - October 2025
- NVidia RTX 5080 and RTX 5090 prices in Australia - July 2025
- Nvidia RTX 5080 and RTX 5090 Prices in Australia - June 2025
For global DDR5 pressure and how it stacks next to GPU line items, see RAM Price Surge: Up to 619% in 2025.
Bottom line
- RTX 5090 is available in Australia, but barely
- Prices are consistently 6000 to 7500 AUD
- Supply is unstable and unpredictable
- Waiting might save money, but not guaranteed
If you are asking whether now is a good time to buy:
It is not.
It is just the least bad time if you need the performance right now.