Nvidia has officially listed the RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell workstation GPU at $13,250, a steep rise that amounts to a 55% increase over the card's original MSRP in roughly a year's time, according to Tom's Hardware. Partner-built versions of the card start somewhat lower, at $11,359.99, but the price trajectory is unmistakably upward.
The RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell packs 96GB of video memory, making it one of the most capable workstation graphics cards available for tasks like 3D rendering, scientific simulation, and — increasingly — running large AI models locally. That last use case is a key part of the story.
As Tom's Hardware notes, the Blackwell Pro line has been climbing in value amid the broader AI boom. Demand for high-memory GPUs has surged as companies and researchers seek hardware that can handle large language models and other AI workloads without relying entirely on cloud services. Nvidia, which dominates the professional GPU market, appears to be pricing accordingly.
VideoCardz.com flagged the updated listing on Nvidia's own storefront, while Wccftech confirmed the card is now "over 50% more expensive" than it was at launch.
For buyers, the math is stark: a card that might have seemed expensive at its original price now costs as much as a well-equipped luxury car. The gap between what enthusiasts and small studios can afford and what the AI era demands of hardware is widening fast — and this price hike is a clear signal of where Nvidia sees the market headed.