According to a new research report from the analyst firm Jon Peddie Research, the growth of the global PC-based graphics add-in board market reached 11.6 million units in Q2'25 and desktop PC CPUs shipments increased to 21.7 million units.
Overall, AIBs will have a compound annual growth rate of -5.4% from 2024 to 2028 and will reach an installed base of 163 million units by the end of the forecast period. Over the next five years, the penetration of AIBs in desktop PCs will be 87%.
As indicated in the following chart, AMD's overall AIB market share decreased -2.1% from last quarter, Intel's market share stayed at 0.0%, and Nvidia's market share increased 2.1%.
“AIB prices dropped for midrange and entry-level, while high-end AIB prices increased, and most retail suppliers ran out of stock. This is very unusual for the second quarter,” said Dr. Jon Peddie, president of Jon Peddie Research. “We think it is a continuation of higher prices expected due to the tariffs and buyers trying to get ahead of that.”
The AIB overall attach rate in desktop PCs for the quarter increased to 154%, up 2.3% from last quarter.
The desktop PC CPU market decreased -4.4% year to year and increased 21.6% quarter to quarter.
The second quarter is traditionally down from the previous quarter. This quarter's GPU shipments were up from the 10-year average of 5.7%.
AMD’s RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 represent AMD's new RDNA 4 architecture, competing with Nvidia's midrange offerings. Nvidia introduced two new Blackwell-series AIBs: the GeForce RTX 5080 Super and the RTX 5070. The company also announced the RTX 500 workstation AIB. Rumors have persisted about two new AIBs from Intel, including a dual-GPU model.