Actualizado en 2026
Sub-$300 graphics cards in 2026 deliver 1080p high gaming and 1440p medium with DLSS/FSR upscaling. RTX 4060 and RX 7600 dominate this tier. We tested every GPU under $300 in our active product index.
Budget GPU scoring weighs measured 1080p/1440p gaming performance in current AAA titles, VRAM capacity (8GB minimum for 2026), ray-tracing performance (where relevant), power consumption and PSU requirements, and driver maturity for the architecture.
Our top pick with a score of 64/100. The Gigabyte Gaming OC GeForce RTX 4060 leads the pack with well-rounded performance at $299.
A strong runner-up scoring 60/100 at $299. Nearly matches our top pick and may suit different budgets or preferences.
Best value on this list. The Intel Arc delivers 53/100 at $249 — solid performance without the premium price tag.
RTX 4060 leads on raw performance and DLSS 3.5 frame generation support. RX 7600 offers slightly better raster performance at similar prices but lacks DLSS — pick by which features matter to you.
For 1080p gaming — yes. For 1440p with high textures, 8GB is the bare minimum; 10-12GB is increasingly recommended for newer AAA. Skip 4GB or 6GB GPUs entirely at this price.
Used RTX 3070 and RTX 4060 cards sit at $200-280 in 2026 — competitive with new budget cards. Verify cooling pad replacement and check for crypto mining history. Mining damage is rare but worth confirming.
3-4 years of acceptable AAA gaming. By year 4, you'll be lowering settings on new AAA releases. Esports and older AAA titles remain playable much longer.
Reviewed by VersusMatrix Editorial Team
Last updated: May 13, 2026
Methodology: AI-powered analysis of technical specifications from manufacturer data. Scores are calculated by comparing products across multiple dimensions and normalized relative to the full category database. Our editorial process is independent and not influenced by affiliate partnerships.