According to finance.biggo.com, Intel has raised recommended customer prices (RCP) for select processors—including the Core Ultra 200S Plus and Xeon 6 families—effective July 3, citing rising supply chain costs and surging AI-driven demand for server CPUs.
Core Ultra 200S Plus: Premium Pricing on New Models
Intel increased the RCP for its newly launched Core Ultra 200S Plus series, with the Core Ultra 7 270K Plus rising by $50 to $349 (~480,000 won), up from its prior $299. The Core Ultra 5 250K Plus also climbed $30 to $229. Both models launched in late March 2024. In contrast, older Core Ultra 200S chips—released earlier in 2024—saw price stability or reductions: the flagship Core Ultra 9 285K remained frozen at $599, while the entry-level Core Ultra 5 225 now ranges between $183 and $236, below its original $241 launch price.
Xeon 6 Server CPUs: $13,955 Top-Tier Price Surge
The price increase for Intel’s data center processors is markedly steeper. The top-tier Xeon 6980P now carries an RCP of $13,955 (~21 million won)—a sharp rebound from aggressive cuts Intel implemented in 2025 and now exceeding its late-2023 launch price. Notably, these Xeon 6 chips are manufactured in Intel’s own fabs, not by TSMC, ruling out wafer-cost pass-through as the primary driver. During its first-quarter 2024 earnings call, Intel stated that “due to supply capacity issues, including wafers, production of data center processors will be prioritized, and supply of consumer products may be relatively constrained.”
Strategic Profitability Over Cost Pass-Through
Analysts interpret the divergent pricing—upward for new models, downward or flat for older ones—as a deliberate profitability strategy rather than a uniform cost response. Both the Core Ultra 200S Plus and legacy Core Ultra 200S use CPU tiles fabricated by TSMC on its N3B process, meaning they face identical advanced-node foundry cost pressures. Yet only the newer Plus variants saw hikes. An Intel spokesperson clarified:
“This price adjustment reflects current market conditions, including rising supply chain costs and strong demand for the Core Ultra 200S Plus processors,” adding that “similar price adjustments based on analogous factors are occurring in other product lines.”
Industry observers emphasize that large-scale enterprise purchase agreements and strategic partnerships mean actual transaction prices—especially for Xeon—may differ substantially from RCPs; thus, whether this move lifts average selling prices (ASP) remains uncertain.
Supply Chain and AI Context
Intel’s move occurs amid documented industry-wide cost pressure: TSMC has signaled price increases for wafers on sub-7nm processes, including N3B. Concurrently, global AI infrastructure investment is accelerating server CPU demand—particularly for high-core-count, high-bandwidth memory-capable chips like the Xeon 6980P. This aligns with Intel’s internal supply allocation shift toward data center products. From a supply chain practitioner perspective, such RCP adjustments signal tightening availability for high-demand SKUs and reinforce the need for early engagement with OEMs and channel partners to secure allocations ahead of peak AI deployment cycles in Q3 and Q4 2024.
Source: finance.biggo.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










