Intel on Thursday officially initiated sales of its 8th Generation 'Coffee Lake' processors for desktops worldwide. The new chips offer more physical cores in the mainstream processor segment than their predecessors, but unlocked versions also come at $15-$20 higher MSRPs. As what usually happens with new products, the main questions are around whether the chips are actually available, and if the on-shelf prices are on par with manufacturer's suggested ones. In our searches so far, the new 8th Gen chips for desktops are not easy to get.

Actual Availability and Pricing

For our availability and price checks, we use multiple well-known stores across the world as well as price search engines to ensure that we are not missing anything. It is important to note that most stores tend to sell products at their MSRPs on launch days, but going forward prices tend to fluctuate.

Intel publishes prices as RCP (Recommended Customer Pricing). This is the price it gives for customers buying 1000 CPUs (a 'tray') as an OEM. Retail prices are often $5-15 higher depending on the configuration.

Intel Core i7-8700K

We start our small availability investigation from the Core i7-8700K (RCP: $359), which has all chances to become a bestseller: the CPU has six cores with HT, a relatively high-frequency out of the box, and an unlocked multiplier. It sounds like a dream processor for an enthusiast that also wants to save money compared to a high-end desktop system.

Intel Core i7-8700K Availability and Pricing
As of October 6th
Retailer Country Local Price Equivalent in USD (w/tax) Status
Amazon U.S. N/A N/A Unavailable
B&H Photo Video U.S. $370 $370 ETA Unknown
CDW U.S. - - Not Listed
Fry's Electronics U.S. - - Not Listed
Newegg U.S. $380 $380 Sold Out
NCIX Canada $470 $373 ETA Unknown
 
Amazon UK U.K. - - Not Listed
Overclockers UK U.K. £360 $471 ETA Unknown
OcUK Pre-Binned U.K. £500 - £800 $654 - $1046 Limited Stock
Scan U.K. £360 $471 ETA Unknown
 
Amazon DE Germany - - Not Listed
Amazon ES Spain - - Not Listed
Amazon FR France - - Not Listed
Alternate Austria €400 $468 ETA in December
Comstern Austria €396 $464 ETA 2-4 weeks
Bora Computer Germany €410 $480 ETA Unknown
CaseKing Germany €410 $479 ETA Unknown
CK Pre-Binned Germany €440 - €870 $514 - $1017 ETA Unknown
 
Komplett Sweden 4,199 kr $515 ETA in December
Misco Sweden - - Not Listed
Proshop Finland €430   ETA 10/26

As it appears, the Core i7-8700K is hard to find. It is listed on Amazon, but as "currently unavailable", which is often not a good sign for overall stock levels. It is possible to pre-order the CPU model from multiple stores across the world, but it looks like their ETA is late-October to early-December, at least for certain stores in Europe. As for online auction sites, there are sellers demanding $800 - $900 per unit.

Intel Core i7-8700

Moving on to the locked Core i7-8700 (RCP: $303). This chip is slightly slower than the unlocked part out of the box, but offers a lower 65W TDP.

Intel Core i7-8700 Availability and Pricing
As of October 6th
Retailer Country Local Price Equivalent USD
(w/tax)
In Stock
Amazon U.S. $312 - ETA Unknown
B&H Photo Video U.S. $312 $312 In Stock
CDW U.S. $430 $430 Call
Fry's Electronics U.S. - - Not Listed
Newegg U.S. - - Not Listed
NCIX Canada $420 $334 In Stock
 
Amazon UK U.K. - - Not Listed
Overclockers UK U.K. £330 $431 In Stock
Scan U.K. £310 $405 ETA Unknown
 
Amazon DE Germany - - Not Listed
Amazon ES Spain - - Not Listed
Amazon FR France - - Not Listed
Alternate Austria €334 $391 ETA in December
Comstern Austria €334 $391 ETA 2-4 weeks
Bora Computer Germany €349 $408 ETA Unknown
CaseKing Germany €334 $398 ETA Unknown
 
Komplett Sweden 3,499 kr $429 ETA in December
Misco Sweden - - Not Listed
Proshop Finland €360 $422 ETA 24/10

The situation looks somewhat better for the non-K processor. The Core i7-8700 is not listed on any European Amazon site, but it can be purchased from B&H in the US, NCIX in Canada, and from Overclockers UK. The chips can be pre-ordered from multiple outlets (including Amazon US), but they are going to ship them sometime in late October or even in December, based on information from stores in Germany, Finland, and Sweden.

Intel Core i5-8600K

Next up is Intel’s highest-performing CPU in the Core i5 range, the i5-8600K (RCP: $257). This CPU officially costs ~$100 below the Core i7-8700K as it works at a slightly lower frequency, but it also lacks Hyper-Threading and has a smaller L3 cache, meaning it will be slower in all types of tasks, multi-threaded or single threaded. Good news, it can be overclocked.

Intel Core i5-8600K Availability and Pricing
As of October 6th
Retailer Country Local Price Equivalent USD
(w/tax)
Status
Amazon U.S. $258 - ETA Unknown
B&H Photo Video U.S. $258 $258 In Stock
CDW U.S. - - Not Listed
Fry's Electronics U.S. - - Not Listed
Newegg U.S. $260 $260 ETA 10-20 days
NCIX Canada $350 $278 ETA Unknown
 
Amazon UK U.K. - - Not Listed
Overclockers UK U.K. £270 $353 ETA Unknown
Scan U.K. £258 $337 ETA Unknown
 
Amazon DE Germany - - Not Listed
Amazon ES Spain - - Not Listed
Amazon FR France - - Not Listed
Alternate Austria €279 $327 ETA in December
Comstern Austria €278 $325 ETA 2-4 weeks
Proshop Austria €290 $340 ETA 10/16
Bora Computer Germany - - Not Listed
CaseKing Germany Boxed: €280
Tray: €270
$327
$316
ETA Unknown
ETA 10/11
CK PreBinned Germany €300 - €600 $351 - $703 Unknown
 
Proshop Finland €300 $351 ETA 10/16
Komplett Sweden 2,899 kr $355 ETA in December
Misco Sweden - - Not Listed

A number of stores, including B&H, Newegg, ProShop, and CaseKing, are taking orders on the Core i5-8600K and promise to ship them by mid-October. In fact, B&H even claims that it has the chips in stock, but its delivery time is 10 days. Meanwhile in most cases, the Core i5-8600K CPUs are either not listed or are available only for pre-order with an unknown shipment date.

Intel Core i5-8400

The Core i5-8400 is positioned as a mainstream CPU for higher-end desktops that will be loved by both OEMs and consumers. This processor is the most affordable six-core CPU on the market today. It has an RCP of $182, which is significantly lower than $257 for the Core i5-8600K and $219 for the Ryzen 5 1600. This chip cannot be overclocked, but it still looks very good for its price. But can you actually buy it right now?

Intel Core i5-8400 Availability and Pricing
As of October 6th
Retailer Country Local Price Equivalent USD
(w/tax)
Status
Amazon U.S. $187 $187 ETA 10/8
B&H Photo Video U.S. $187 $187 In Stock
CDW U.S. -   Not Listed
Fry's Electronics U.S. -   Not Listed
Newegg U.S. $190 $190 In Stock
NCIX Canada $250 $199 In Stock
 
Amazon UK U.K. £172 $225 Ships from U.S.
Overclockers UK U.K. £180 $235 In Stock
Scan U.K. £172 $132 In Stock
 
Amazon DE Germany - - Not Listed
Amazon ES Spain - - Not Listed
Amazon FR France - - Not Listed
Alternate Austria €195 $228 ETA in December
Comstern Austria €200 $234 In Stock
ProShop Austria €200 $234 ETA 10/24
Bora Computer Germany €209 $244 ETA Unknown
CaseKing Germany €200 $234 ETA 10/11
 
Arvutitark Estonia €189 $221 In Stock (ltd)
Proshop Finland - - Not Listed
Komplett Sweden 1,999 kr $245 ETA in December
Misco Sweden - - Not Listed

Apparently, you can buy this chip. Leading retailers in North America either have the Core i5-8400 in stock or are about to get the first batch. You can also buy the chips from two retailers in the U.K. Meanwhile, mainland Europe is a mixed bag for the i5-8400 availability. You can grab the chip in Estonia from Arvutitark, but the company had 10 CPUs in total at press time — that is one unit per store in most of the cases. Meanwhile, CaseKing and ProShop Austria expect to start selling the i5-8400 in mid-to-late October. Some other outlets expect the inexpensive six-core Coffee Lake model to arrive in December.

Intel Core i3-8350K

Moving down to the Core i3 range. For users considering Intel’s Core i5-7600K, the new Core i3-8350K is now an optimum target and significantly cheaper. The Core i3-8350K has four cores, runs at 4 GHz, has 8 MB LLC and an unlocked multiplier. Intel wants $168 for the i3-8350K and this pretty much looks like a bargain when compared to the i5-7600K ($242). Now, let’s check the actual availability and pricing of the new SKU.

Intel Core i3-8350K Availability and Pricing
As of October 6th
Retailer Country Local Price Equivalent USD (w/ tax) Status
Amazon U.S. $179 $179 In Stock
B&H Photo Video U.S. $179 $179 In Stock
CDW U.S. - - Not Listed
Fry's Electronics U.S. - - Not Listed
Newegg U.S. $180 $180 In Stock
NCIX Canada $240 $191 In Stock
 
Amazon UK U.K. £164 $215 Ships from U.S.
Overclockers UK U.K. £170 $222 In Stock
Scan U.K. £167 $218 In Stock
 
Amazon DE Germany - - Not Listed
Amazon ES Spain - - Not Listed
Amazon FR France - - Not Listed
Alternate Austria €193 $226 ETA in December
Comstern Austria €198 $232 In Stock
ProShop Austria €200 $234 In Stock
Bora Computer Germany €199 $233 ETA Unknown
CaseKing Germany €200 $234 In Stock
 
Proshop Finland €210 $246 In Stock
Komplett Sweden 1,999 kr $245 ETA in December
Misco Sweden - - Not Listed

The Core i3-8350K is available from multiple retailers worldwide, but with a small overprice compared to its RCP as expected. That small overprice is common for other Coffee Lake models, but with the i3-8350K, it puts the SKU on the territory of the i5-8400. The latter is, of course, a non-overclocking CPU that runs at a moderate frequency, but it has six cores. Obviously, a lot of people will wonder which of the products is better for their workloads, but even users may be confused with the i3 and i5 overlap.

Intel Core i3-8100

The most affordable Coffee Lake model announced so far is the quad-core Core i3-8100, it costs $117 and can match something like the Core i5-7500 ($192) in terms of performance. Let’s check its real price and availability.

Intel Core i3-8100 Availability and Pricing
As of October 6th
Retailer Country Local Price Equivalent USD (w/ tax) Status
Amazon U.S. - - Not Listed
Check Availability
B&H Photo Video U.S. $117 $117 In Stock
CDW U.S. - - Not Listed
Fry's Electronics U.S. - - Not Listed
Newegg U.S. $120 $120 In Stock
NCIX Canada $160 $127 In Stock
 
Amazon UK U.K. - - Not Listed
Overclockers UK U.K. £110 $144 In Stock
Scan U.K. £110 $144 In Stock
 
Amazon DE Germany - - Not Listed
Amazon ES Spain - - Not Listed
Amazon FR France - - Not Listed
Alternate Austria €128 $150 ETA in December
Comstern Austria €130 $152 ETA 2-4 weeks
ProShop Austria €130 $152 In Stock
Bora Computer Germany €125 $146 ETA Unknown
CaseKing Germany €130 $152 ETA 10/11
 
Proshop Finland €135 $158 In Stock
Komplett Sweden 1,349 kr $165 ETA in December
Misco Sweden - - Not Listed

For some reason, Amazon does not offer the Core i3-8100 at all anywhere, but you can get the product from various other retailers across the world. At least in the US, the price of the i3-8100 is not inflated because it is a new model or because the supply is tight. In other regions, you can either get it straight away or within a week, which means the stores may have a good supply of the chip.

More Cores, Larger Caches, Higher Price if Unlocked

For many years, Intel has had a rather strict division between its unlocked Core i7 and Core i5 CPUs as well as Core i3 chips for mainstream desktop platforms both in terms of specifications and in terms of pricing. The Core i7 has always had four cores with HT as well as an 8 MB L3 cache, the Core i5 has featured four cores without HT as well as a slightly cut-down 6 MB L3 cache, whereas the Core i3 has integrated two cores with HT and 3 or 4 MB LLC. The launch of the Coffee Lake (Core i-series 8000 sequence) family adds two physical cores to all of the aforementioned product families, expands their caches, speeds up memory and brings in a number of other improvements — you can read about all of them in our review. The general principle that divides different product families remains the same though: the Core i7 has six cores with HT and a 12 MB cache, the Core i5 scraps HT and a part of the cache, whereas the Core i3 becomes a quad-core CPU without HT and a smaller cache.

General Specifications of Intel's 2017 Mainstream Desktop CPUs
8th Generation  7th Generation
  Cores Freq.
(Base)
L3 TDP   Cores Freq.
(Base)
L3 TDP
i7-8700K 6/12 3.7 GHz 12 MB 95W i7-7700K 4/8 4.2 GHz 8 MB 91W
i7-8700 3.2 GHz 65W i7-7700 3.6 GHz 65W
i5-8600K 6/6 3.6 GHz 9 MB 95W i5-7600K 4/4 3.8 GHz 6 MB 91W
i5-8400 2.8 GHz 65W i5-7400 3.0 GHz 65W
i3-8350K 4/4 4 GHz 8 MB 91W i3-7350K 2/4 4.2 GHz 4 MB 60W
i3-8100 3.6 GHz 6 MB 65W i3-7100 3.9 GHz 51W

When it comes to pricing, the situation requires some attention as it is a bit different from the usual. The locked Core i7-8700, Core i5-8400 and Core i3-8100 cost exactly the same amount of money as their direct predecessors (the i7-7700, i5-7400 and i3-8100). So, people getting those products essentially get two extra cores for the same price. Meanwhile, CPUs with an unlocked multiplier — the Core i7-8700K and the Core i5-8600K — run faster than their locked brethren out-of-box and can be overclocked further, but their RCPs are a bit higher than those of their direct predecessors.

In fact, after Intel introduced its Core i7 and Core i5 CPUs with an unlocked multiplier in 2011, it has, for the most part, kept RCPs constant, except with a blip on the Broadwell CPUs (due to eDRAM) and now the upgraded core parts. Intel charged $313 - $317 for an unlocked Core i7 in 2011-2012, increased that price to $339-$350 in 2013-2017 and even sold an unlocked Core i7 with a powerful iGPU for $366 in 2015 (but since the Broadwell Unlocked was barely aimed at 'traditional' enthusiasts, we can ignore that). Likewise, Intel used to sell an unlocked Core i5 for $212-$216 in 2011-2012 and then increased their prices to ~$242 for 2013-early 2017 period (if the i5-5675C is not taken into account).

Today, Intel increases pricing of the Core i7-8700K and the Core i5-8600K CPUs by $20 and $15 compared to their direct predecessors from the Kaby Lake family, a relatively small increase that fits into the trend. This is hardly surprising. Overclocking is becoming more popular these days, makers of motherboards tend to put a hefty premium on their high-end products, so Intel wants to get its slice of the pie as well.

When it comes to the Core i3-8350K, it costs $168, which is in line with its direct predecessor, the Core i3-7350K. Keep in mind that Intel launched its first unlocked Core i3 earlier this year and these chips cost more than their brethren with locked multipliers did. Entry-level i3 overclocking is something new for Intel, but there is no MSRP change with the increase of the number of cores.

First Core Count Upgrade in a Decade and Per-Core Pricing Drops

Intel introduced its first quad-core processor for mainstream desktop platforms in 2006 with the launch of the Core 2 Quad Q6600. The company has been slowly increasing core count of its high-end desktop CPUs from four to six, then to eight, then to 10, and then all the way to 18 cores this year. Meanwhile, Intel’s mainstream desktop platforms have not seen any core count upgrade for a decade. Obviously, they have been gaining performance with microarchitecture enhancements, the addition of Hyper-Threading and other improvements (such as bigger and better iGPUs), but their physical core count stalled at two for entry-level and at four in case of higher-end parts from 2006 to 2017. With the launch of the Coffee Lake, Intel changes that.

While Intel does increase pricing of unlocked Core i5/i7 CPUs compared to predecessors a bit, it does not do so with the rest of the family, adding cores at no charge. Probably, this means that the costs of the new Coffee Lake-S chips are not significantly higher than the costs of the Kaby Lake-S CPUs operating at higher frequencies, which possibly means that Intel’s 14++ (14nm-plus-plus) process technology is mature and the yields are high. Another thing to point out is that Intel significantly lowers per-core pricing of its CPUs. For example, the i5-8400 and the i3-8100 are available at $30 per core, down from $47 per core for the i5-7400 just a couple of quarters ago.

The new Core i-series 8000-sequence CPUs require new Intel 300-series chipset based motherboards, so people interested in upgrading will still have to pay a premium for the new Coffee Lake platform. But at least there are now mainstream ($182 - $257) Intel CPUs with six cores as well as entry-level ($117) offerings with four cores. At these price points, the new processors for Intel are likely to get rather popular among consumers, especially those who upgrade from five or six-year-old platforms.

Prices of Contemporary CPUs from Intel
  Cores/
Threads
Base Freq. Intel
RCP
Price per Core
Coffee Lake-S
i7-8700K 6/12 3.7 GHz $359 $60
i7-8700 6/12 3.2 GHz $303 $51
i5-8600K 6/6 3.6 GHz $257 $43
i5-8400 6/6 2.8 GHz $182 $30
i3-8350K 4/4 4.0 GHz $168 $42
i3-8100 4/4 3.6 GHz $117 $29
Kaby Lake-S
i7-7700K 4/8 4.2 GHz $339 $89
i7-7700 4/8 3.6 GHz $303 $84
i5-7600K 4/4 3.8 GHz $242 $60
i5-7400 4/4 3.0 GHz $182 $47
i3-7350K 2/4 4.2 GHz $168 $92
i3-7100 2/4 3.9 GHz $117 $60
High-End Desktop CPUs
i9-7980XE 18/36 2.6 GHz $1979 $110
i9-7960X 16/32 2.8 GHz $1684 $105
i9-7940X 14/28 3.1 GHz $1387 $99
i9-7920X 12/24 2.9 GHz $1189 $105
i9-7900X 10/20 3.3 GHz $989 $108
i7-7820X 8/16 3.6 GHz $589 $86
i7-7800X 6/12 3.5 GHz $383 $72
i7-7740X 4/8 4.3 GHz $339 $86
i5-7640X 4/4 4.0 GHz $242 $64

Without any doubts, Intel’s official recommended prices for the new Coffee Lake-S parts look rather good if we compare them against RCPs of the Kaby Lake-S SKUs. Meanwhile, the big question is how much do the new parts actually cost in real stores and how widely available they are. This is something we are going to investigate in our next section.

Some Thoughts

The new Coffee Lake CPUs represent a significant upgrade of Intel’s mainstream desktop products in terms of core count. The launch of relatively affordable Core i5/i7 models with six cores will catalyze many people to upgrade their PCs with quad-core CPUs, so we expect the 8th Generation Core i5/i7 products to be rather popular. The quad-core Core i3-8350K seems to have a lot of potential among overclockers, but its price is so close to the six-core Core i5-8400 that it will inevitably create some confusion. In the meantime, the quad-core Core i3-8100 brings a significant performance boost to the i3 range, so we expect the SKU to be in high demand too.

Now, let’s talk about availability. The top-of-the-range Core i7-8700K model is not available from major retailers at all. Even on auction sites, there were only two sellers to offer this chip for $800 - $900 at press time. The Core i7-8700 is more readily available from large suppliers, but the majority of online stores cannot ship it right now. Availability of the Core i5-8600K is scarce, but some suppliers promise to have them in their stock sometimes in mid-October. As for the remaining three chips in the Coffee Lake lineup, the Core i5-8400, the Core i3-8350K, and the Core i3-8100, they can be obtained from multiple retailers, but not from all of them.

As noted above, pricing of new products in their first days of availability tends to be very close to MSRP. We have noticed that some of the CFL SKUs are priced above MSRP, but the difference was not very substantial. The big question is how high the prices are going to get if demand for Coffee Lake exceeds Intel’s supply.

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  • Samus - Friday, October 6, 2017 - link

    That’s only partially true. You can still mildly overclock a non-K part, just not via multiplier. But your point stands. Nobody is going to cheap out on a cpu when forced to buy a Z series board. That’s thy the i3 is collecting dust everywhere. If it could be paired with a $80 motherboard. It would be flying off the shelf.
  • limitedaccess - Friday, October 6, 2017 - link

    If that mild overclock means maintaining all core turbo at 4.6 I'm fine with that being much better in the efficiency curve (much easier to cool as well) and more guaranteed stability.

    You need a z370 as well to use higher than stock memory which at least for me is more impact in certain applications that I have performance concerns with than that 5ghz overclock.
  • bill_mt - Monday, October 9, 2017 - link

    It seems Newegg offers over 50 z370 chip boards, starting at $120. I was also amazed at the incredibly wide range of ram available from Gskill at decent speeds, i.e., 4x8 3400 for $330. I find it amazing that there are over 50 boards available with no cpu supply. Also, Newegg did not show a mobo z370 chip option, but had a LGA 1151 (300 Series) option which produced 53 z370 offerings. I was surprised to learn the Z370 boards are only compatible with 8th Gen 1151 chips
  • 8steve8 - Friday, October 6, 2017 - link

    meh, i will buy z370 and a K CPU and will never overclock it. At stock it is still faster than 7700k and 7700.
  • limitedaccess - Friday, October 6, 2017 - link

    On paper the i7-8700 and 8700k would be the same stock for stock as they have the same all core turbo of 4.3ghz.
  • sonny73n - Saturday, October 7, 2017 - link

    Funny you said you'll never overclock this gen CPU when you're comparing it to the previous gen.
  • KAlmquist - Saturday, October 7, 2017 - link

    shopblt.com shows the following numbers for pending orders, which gives us some indication of demand:

    8700K: 4779
    8700: 1425
    8600K: 1816
    8400: 1740
    8350K: 1
    8100: 1 in stock

    This suggests that the top of the line 8700K is very popular right now. Probably part of that is that a lot of the people who would be interested in any of the lower priced parts are more cost sensitive and thus more inclined to wait a few weeks for prices to fall to the MSRP values.

    It also suggests that there is interest in the multiplier locked parts, but not so much in the 4 core parts. These are competing directly with the 4 core Kaby Lake products, and this may be where the higher cost of Coffee Lake motherboards is having the largest impact on demand.
  • putneg - Wednesday, October 11, 2017 - link

    This is the kind of stuff that makes me dislike this place more and more. Sure be intel biased i dont care, but at least bring some analysis to the table instead of vomiting Intel PR slides with zero thoughts going into what is written. You need to be really bad at your job to ignore, in an article supposedly analyzing product stocks, the fact that there is NO H370 and so it makes ZERO sense to buy a locked chip with an overclocking board. It's just so blatant that they ignored that fact. They did the same in the coffee lake review. It's just low effort stuff that i'd expect from a low wage intern from india or maybe even a blog bot. There used to be a time this place had actual reports and analysis, sad that it doesn't anymore. I can read the Intel PR slides without your help thank you.
  • Mo3tasm - Friday, October 6, 2017 - link

    The low availability made me think the CPU is hot and everyone want it, but that turned out to be due to extremely low stocks. I can see from comments here and there on retailers' websites that people are jumping to AMD's wagon just for the availability!!
  • Drumsticks - Friday, October 6, 2017 - link

    It really doesn't strike me as a paper launch. You can still buy an 8600k. There's no real indication that Coffee Lake *yields* are bad; it's 14nm fundamentally, and Intel should have excellent yields there.

    I think that the 8700k is just going to be in huge demand; it's Intel's best chip as a product, by far, since Sandy Bridge. Maybe fully enabled products are just hard to come by, but I think it's just launch demand outstripping supply, which has happened with basically every hardware launch ever.

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