DDR4 & DDR5 payouts are up — see this week’s index

Sell Your 96GB DDR5-4800 ECC RDIMM

Updated July 7, 2026

$340–$450

per unit, non-binding indicative range

Non-binding — firm quote in 4 business hours.

Get my firm quote — answered in 4 business hours + Add to quote list

What condition pays what

ConditionMeansPays
New sealed Factory or anti-static seal intact $391–$518
Used, working Pulled from a working system, label intact $340–$450
Untested Revised up if it passes our bench $272–$360
Damaged Bent pins, burns, cracked PCB — we'll say no politely declined

What each brand pays

Brand changes what used memory are worth — Samsung sets the benchmark, then the other tier-one makers, and value brands pay a little less. We still buy every brand on this list.

Brand Indicative payout
Samsungbest price $340–$450
SK Hynix Tier-1 OEM DRAM; near-Samsung liquidity in the server channel. $326–$432
Micron Tier-1 OEM DRAM; strong data-center demand. $320–$423
Crucial Micron's retail arm — genuine Micron silicon, thinner enterprise resale. $299–$396
Kingston Reliable, high-volume module maker; softer resale premium than the OEM three. $286–$378
Corsair Enthusiast/desktop brand; limited server-channel demand. $272–$360
G.Skill Enthusiast/desktop brand; limited server-channel demand. $272–$360
ADATA Value module maker; lower used-market liquidity. $258–$342
Third-party Nemix, A-Tech, Timetec and similar third-party assemblers — we still buy, at a lower payout. $224–$297
Unknown Unbranded or unidentifiable modules; priced conservatively, still purchased. $204–$270

Ranges are non-binding and scaled from the Samsung benchmark for this exact spec — your firm quote comes by email within 4 business hours.

What this module is

A 96GB DDR5 registered ECC RDIMM at 4800 MT/s (PC5-38400), a workhorse capacity for Sapphire Rapids and first-gen EPYC Genoa-era servers. Registered DDR4 held its bid through the 2025-26 memory crunch; with fabs pivoting to DDR5, clean modules like this keep clearing within days. Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron parts clear quickest, and we test each module on the bench before finalizing payment. Typical part numbers are HMCGM4MEBRB and M321RYGA0BB0-CQK.

Part numbers we buy

Don't see yours? Paste it into the quote form — we match variants daily.

Selling a batch? 8+ units +3% · 32+ units +6% — pallet lots go through the business desk.

How it works

  1. Firm quote by email within 4 business hours (Mon–Sat 8–6 ET).
  2. Ship free with our prepaid label — postmark within your lock window.
  3. Paid by Zelle, PayPal, or check within 48 hours of testing.

If testing disagrees with your description, you get photo evidence and a choice: revised offer or free return.

Questions

How much is a 96GB DDR5-4800 ECC RDIMM worth in 2026?

Our current indicative payout is $340-$450 per unit in used working condition, with the firm number emailed within 4 business hours of your quote request. The range moves with the market — the Payout Index shows what we actually paid over the trailing 30 days.

Will a module pulled from a working server count as "used, working"?

Yes — pulled-from-working with an intact label and clean pins is exactly our base grade, quoted at the full range shown. Our bench verifies with an SPD read and a MemTest pass, and the measured spec always wins over the sticker.

Do I need to wipe RAM before selling it?

No — DRAM is volatile and loses its contents at power-off, so there is nothing to wipe by the time it reaches us. Storage is different: every SSD and laptop we buy is erased to NIST 800-88 with a free emailed certificate.

What if I have more than eight sticks?

Quantity helps you: 8+ identical modules earn +3%, 32+ earn +6%, and pallet-scale lots go through our business desk with a manifest quote and New England pickup available.

How fast do I actually get paid?

Zelle or PayPal within 48 hours of test completion; typical mail-to-money is 5-7 days end to end. Your quote locks before you ship, and if the market drops after we quote, we pay the quote anyway.

Related

All server ram → · This item on the Payout Index →