Let’s be honest, this debate has been going on forever. Console fans say PC is too expensive. PC gamers say consoles nickel-and-dime you with subscriptions. Both sides have a point. So instead of picking a winner based on feelings, let’s look at the actual numbers in 2026 and figure out which platform really costs more over time.
The Upfront Cost: Consoles Win (For Now)
This is where consoles have always had the edge — and it’s still true. You can walk into a store and get a current-gen console for a fixed price. Here’s what consoles actually cost as of May 2026:
| Console | Price (USD) |
| PS5 (Standard) | $649.99 |
| PS5 Digital Edition | $599.99 |
| PS5 Pro | $899.99 |
| Xbox Series X | $649.99 |
| Xbox Series X Digital | $599.99 |
| Xbox Series S (1TB) | $449.99 |
| Nintendo Switch 2 | $449.99 |
A budget gaming PC that can match console performance starts at around $700–$800 if you build it yourself. So yes, consoles are cheaper upfront. But that’s only part of the story.
The Ongoing Cost: PC Wins Over Time
Here’s what most people forget when they say consoles are cheaper: consoles charge you to play online every single year. PC doesn’t. Let’s do the 5-year math:
| Cost | Console (PS5) | PC |
| Hardware | $649.99 | $750 (budget build) |
| Online Multiplayer | $60/yr = $300 over 5 yrs | FREE (most games) |
| Game Prices (avg) | $70 per game | $40–$50 avg (Steam sales) |
| Subscription (optional) | PS Plus Extra: $100/yr | Game Pass PC: $13.99/mo |
| Free Games | Limited monthly titles | Epic Games Store free weekly games |
Key Insight: Over 5 years, a PS5 owner paying for PS Plus Essential ($60/yr) spends an extra $300 just to play online — money a PC gamer never has to spend at all.
Game Prices: A Big Hidden Difference
This is one of the most underrated factors in the debate. PC games are structurally cheaper than console games:
- Steam sales regularly offer 50–75% off major titles
- Epic Games Store has given away hundreds of free games since 2018
- Console games typically launch at $70 and stay expensive longer
If you buy just two games a month, that price difference adds up to hundreds of dollars over a few years, easily covering the gap in upfront hardware cost.
What About Game Pass?
Xbox Game Pass is genuinely a great deal, and it works on both console AND PC. As of April 2026, Microsoft actually cut prices after admitting Game Pass had become too expensive:
| Plan | Old Price | New Price (Apr 2026) | What You Get |
| Game Pass Essential | $9.99/mo | $9.99/mo | Online multiplayer only |
| Game Pass Premium | $14.99/mo | $14.99/mo | 200+ games, online play |
| Game Pass Ultimate | $29.99/mo | $22.99/mo | All games, PC + Console + Cloud |
| PC Game Pass | $16.49/mo | $13.99/mo | PC games library |
Note: New Call of Duty titles will no longer be added to Game Pass at launch starting in 2026; they’ll arrive about a year after release instead.
Upgrades & Longevity
Consoles are fixed hardware. When a new generation launches, your old console becomes outdated, and you have to buy a whole new one. A gaming PC is modular — you can upgrade just the GPU, or add more RAM, without replacing the entire machine.
- A mid-range PC from 2026 will still be capable in 2030 with a single GPU upgrade
- Console generations typically last 6–7 years before becoming obsolete
- PC components retain roughly 70% resale value vs 50% for consoles
So Which Is Actually Cheaper?
Here’s the honest answer: it depends on how you game.
Console is cheaper if: You buy fewer than 5–6 games a year, don’t game online much, and just want to plug in and play with zero hassle.
PC is cheaper if: You game heavily, buy a lot of games, play online regularly, or plan to use the machine for work and entertainment beyond gaming.
The breakeven point is usually around 2–3 years for an active gamer. After that, PC tends to be the better investment. If you only play casually, a console is perfectly fine and genuinely more convenient.