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PC power supply unit with cables

The Five-Minute Wattage Formula

Add up the maximum draw of your major components:

That’s the PSU wattage you should buy. We’ll walk through real examples below.

Example Calculations

Budget Gaming Build (Ryzen 5 7600 + RX 7700 XT)

Mid-Range Build (Ryzen 7 7800X3D + RTX 5070 Ti)

High-End Build (Core Ultra 9 285K + RTX 5090)

Why so much headroom? Modern GPUs spike well above their TGP for milliseconds during transient loads. The RTX 5090 has been measured at >900W during spikes. Cheap PSUs throttle or shut down on these spikes. Headroom is insurance against intermittent crashes.

80 PLUS Efficiency Tiers Explained

Tier50% Load EfficiencyWorth It?
80+ White82%Skip — minimum effort tier
80+ Bronze85%OK for budget builds under $1,200
80+ Gold90%Sweet spot for most builds
80+ Platinum92%Worth it for high-power, long-running systems
80+ Titanium94%Diminishing returns; only for workstations under permanent load

ATX 3.1 and 12V-2×6 Connectors

If you’re buying a new PSU in 2026, get ATX 3.1 (the spec, not 3.0). The 12V-2×6 connector replaces the original 12VHPWR and is mechanically backwards-compatible but with much improved safety margins. Brands to look for: Corsair, Seasonic, be quiet!, Super Flower (rebranded as EVGA, NZXT, etc.). Avoid no-name PSUs entirely.

Modular, Semi-Modular, or Non-Modular?

Fully modular is worth the small premium for any build over $800. The cable management improvement is significant. Semi-modular (only the 24-pin and CPU EPS are fixed) is acceptable. Non-modular saves $15-30 but creates a wiring mess inside the case.

Why Bigger Isn’t Always Better

A PSU is most efficient at 40-60% load. A 1500W PSU running a 300W system is operating around 20% load — well outside its efficiency sweet spot. You’ll pay more upfront, generate more heat at idle, and not gain anything. Right-sizing matters.

Single Rail vs Multi Rail

For modern systems, single +12V rail is fine. Multi-rail used to be a safety feature when builds drew unpredictable spikes from many components, but modern PSU protection circuits make single-rail equally safe and a touch more flexible for high-draw GPUs.

How Long Should a PSU Last?

A quality Gold-rated PSU should provide 10+ years of reliable service. We’ve used Seasonic and Corsair units that lasted through 3-4 GPU generations. Capacitors degrade over time so efficiency drops slightly, but a well-built PSU at year 8 still runs your system fine.

Warranty as a Quality Signal

Modern premium PSUs come with 10-12 year warranties. Anything under 5 years is a budget unit — fine for a backup PC but not for a system you depend on. Corsair RM series (10-year), Seasonic Focus PX (10-year), and be quiet! Pure Power 12 (10-year) are all excellent picks.

Common Mistakes

  • Buying too small to “save money” — the savings disappear when your system crashes mid-game
  • Trusting Watts as the only spec — a 1000W no-name PSU is worse than a 750W premium unit
  • Using daisy-chained PCIe cables on a 300W+ GPU — use one cable per 8-pin connector for any GPU above 250W TGP
  • Skipping the 12V-2×6 sense pins on the new connector — make sure both sense pins are fully seated

Bottom Line

Calculate your real wattage, add 30% headroom, pick an 80+ Gold ATX 3.1 unit from a tier-1 manufacturer with a 10-year warranty. That formula will give you a PSU that’s still running smoothly when you upgrade your next GPU, and your next CPU, and probably the one after that.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does this process take?
First-timers should budget 60-90 minutes. Experienced users can complete it in 20-30 minutes. Don’t rush — measuring twice and cutting once applies to PC work too. Mistakes here can damage hardware or void warranties.
Do I need any special tools?
A magnetic Phillips screwdriver, an anti-static wrist strap (or grounding via touching a metal case before starting), and good lighting are the essentials. A flashlight and small tweezers help in tight spaces.
Will this void my warranty?
For most consumer hardware, basic maintenance and upgrades don’t void warranties — the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act in the US prevents that. But cutting tamper seals or removing soldered components can. Always check your specific model’s warranty terms first.
What if something goes wrong?
Stop immediately, document the issue with photos, and check our troubleshooting guides. Most issues are reversible if you don’t force anything. When in doubt, restore the original state and seek help on r/buildapc or your component’s official support channel.

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