We buy working CPUs, RAM, SSDs & NVMe
Not a scrap yard. No motherboards, PSUs, cases or low-grade boards.
Recyclers · Councils · IT shops

Computer chip recycler in the UK — paid resale path for working stock.

If you handle electronics recycling at any scale — council site, community group, repair shop, small commercial recycler — most working CPUs and RAM in your processing stream are worth 50–100× more as components than as scrap metal. ChipFlip exists to take those parts and pay you for them.

No min volume
£30 order minimum, no chip minimum
After testing
Paid by Faster Payments
Mixed OK
No sorting required
INTEL CORE i5 INTEL CORE i7 WORKING

The hidden value most computer recycling misses

If you've ever watched a pile of old desktops or laptops get stripped for recycling, you know most of the value gets recovered as raw materials — copper, aluminium, gold from contacts, plastics. The CPUs, RAM, and SSDs inside go to scrap or get shredded along with the boards.

The thing is: a working 14th-generation Intel i9 chip is worth roughly £109 on the secondary refurb market. The exact same chip, run through a smelter, recovers about £0.05 worth of metal content. That gap exists for almost every working CPU made in the last 10 years.

The reason most recycling streams don't capture it is straightforward: testing and listing chips one by one is slow, sorting by generation is tedious, and there's been no clean buyback channel set up for the volume. ChipFlip is that channel. We take pulled chips in any state — sorted, mixed, in trays, in sacks — bench-test on receipt, and pay per part for what works.

You don't need to test or sort first. You don't need to know what a chip is worth. WhatsApp a list or post a sample batch, we'll quote and process the lot.

Who we work with

Recyclers

Small commercial recyclers

If you process e-waste for businesses or take public drop-offs, the working CPUs and RAM in your inflow are a revenue stream we can pay for monthly. Add it on top of your existing scrap and parts channels.

Councils

Council recycling sites

Public drop-off sites accumulate computers donated by residents during cleanouts. Many sites already separate IT for WEEE — adding a working-component pull adds value-recovery without changing the workflow much.

Repair

IT repair shops

Customer drop-offs, dead-board pulls, leftover stock from upgrades. You probably already have a drawer of CPUs and RAM you've been meaning to do something with — that's a £300–£3,000 batch sitting there.

Community

Charity & community groups

Charity shops processing donated electronics, men's sheds doing community refurb, university surplus departments. Small recurring batches welcome — £30 minimum, no chip-count minimum.

Refurb

Refurbishers & resellers

If you sell complete refurbished machines, the leftover working components from non-resaleable units go further as buyback than as parts inventory you'll never use.

Education

Schools, colleges, universities

End-of-life IT from teaching labs and admin offices. ChipFlip can route the value-recovery alongside whatever WEEE arrangement is already in place — components in, scrap continues to your existing recycler.

What we mean by "working" stock

You don't need to test components before sending. We test on receipt. But it helps to know what we're testing for so you understand the grading on your batch report:

  • Grade A — boots cleanly in our test bench, no bent pins, no thermal damage. Pays the listed price (e.g. i9-14xxx → £109).
  • Grade B — boots fine but has cosmetic flaws. Sticker residue on the heat spreader, a scratch, slight discolouration. Pays 80–90% of list.
  • Grade C — clearly pulled from a working system but we couldn't bench-test for some reason (no compatible socket, no platform). Pays 60–80% as deposit, balance after later test.
  • Grade X — won't boot, cracked die, bent pins beyond recovery, burnt. We don't pay for these. Returned at our cost or routed through our WEEE channel — your call.

Grades aren't about cosmetic perfection — they're about whether the chip works. A scuffed-up i7 that boots is worth far more than a pristine-looking dud.

How it works at smaller-scale volume

1

Build a quote on chipflip.co.uk

Use the live quote tool — tap + on each chip type and capacity, see total update in real time. £30 minimum order; below that postage doesn't make sense, hold and add to next batch.

2

Or WhatsApp a list

For mixed batches you can't be bothered to itemise, just WhatsApp +44 7908 749694 with rough details. Photos help. Reply within working hours during UK business days.

3

Pack and post

Postal address comes by email after you lock the quote. You arrange and pay for postage with any UK carrier — Royal Mail Tracked is fine for most lots. Padded envelope or box, individually wrap chips so pins don't bend.

4

Bench-tested on receipt

Typically 1–2 business days from receipt to grading report; faster on small batches, longer on 200+ component runs. We email a per-line grading report — every chip listed with its grade and payable amount. Photo evidence on any regraded items.

5

Confirm and get paid

Accept the report → payment by Faster Payments after testing. UK Faster Payments usually clear in your bank within an hour or two of being sent. Mismatch on grading? Return the whole batch at our cost under the ChipFlip Promise. No haggling, no debate.

6

One-time photo ID check

UK law (Scrap Metal Dealers Act 2013) requires us to verify identity on first sale. Photo ID and proof of address — done once, kept on file 2 years for repeat sellers. Photo ID help →

What we accept (and what we don't)

What we pay for:

  • Consumer CPUs — Intel Core i3 / i5 / i7 / i9. £5–£109 per chip on the fixed list. Consumer AMD Ryzen / Threadripper desktop not on the list.
  • Server CPUs — Xeon Scalable / E-series, AMD EPYC. Quoted on receipt, no fixed price. WhatsApp a breakdown.
  • Consumer RAM — DDR4 / DDR5 UDIMM (8GB and up), fixed per-capacity. ECC RDIMM / LRDIMM server RAM — yes, on receipt-quote (no fixed price).
  • SSDs and NVMe drives — 128GB minimum size, M.2 / U.2 / 2.5"

What we route through WEEE recycling free (no per-part payment):

  • Motherboards, GPUs, mechanical hard drives, PSUs, cases
  • DDR2 and DDR3 RAM (no secondary market demand)
  • Pentium 4 and earlier CPUs (same reason)
  • Anything we judge unsafe or unrecoverable

If your batch contains a mix of pay-for and free-recycle items, just send it. We'll separate and process — the report shows what was paid for and what was routed to recycling. You don't need to pre-sort.

Worked example: 50 mixed CPUs from a council drop-off site

Realistic batch a council recycling site might accumulate over a month from public IT drop-offs:

  • ~15 i7 chips (mostly 8th–11th gen) — Grade A average £25 → £375
  • ~20 i5 chips (mostly 7th–11th gen) — Grade A average £14 → £280
  • ~10 i3 / Pentium chips — Grade A average £6 → £60
  • ~5 older CPUs (1st–4th gen) — Grade A average £4 → £20

Total Grade A buyback on this batch: ~£735. Same chips routed straight through scrap recycling: about £0.30. Even after 20% downgrade for cosmetic flaws (these get handled), realistic net ≈ £600.

For a council site handling 50 CPUs/month, that's £6,000–£8,000 a year — funding that could go toward staffing, equipment, or another local recycling initiative. Not life-changing money but real money for parts that were going to be scrapped anyway.

Common questions from new sellers

What if we don't know what kind of chip we have?
Send a photo to WhatsApp — we can ID most chips from a top-side photo of the heat spreader. If the markings are worn, we'll bench-test on receipt and grade after.
Are old chips worth anything?
Anything from i3-6xxx onward (roughly 2015 and later) generally pays more than scrap. Pre-2015 chips are usually £1–£5 each. We'll quote and you can decide.
Do we need a business account or VAT registration?
No. Individual sellers, sole traders, partnerships, limited companies, charities, councils — anyone can sell. The Scrap Metal Dealers Act 2013 ID check is required on first sale regardless of buyer type.
What if a chip arrives damaged in transit?
Photographs go to you within 24 hours of receipt. Packaging-related damage either regraded down (Grade B/C) or returned at our cost — your call. That's why we recommend insuring inbound postage to the full quote value.
How quickly do we get paid?
Faster Payments after we receive, test, and you accept the per-line grading report. Typically 1–2 business days from receipt to grading report; faster on small batches, longer on 200+ component runs.
Can we visit the facility?
Yes, by appointment. Unit D13, Fieldhouse Industrial Estate, Rochdale OL12 0AA. Useful for trade buyers wanting to see the operation. Email or WhatsApp to arrange.
What about parts that don't pay?
Anything we don't pay for — motherboards, GPUs, mechanical HDDs, etc. — gets routed through our partner WEEE channel at no charge to you. You don't get back-charged for anything.
Build a quote in 30 seconds, or WhatsApp a listFor pre-itemised batches use the live quote tool. For mixed lots, WhatsApp a rough breakdown — reply within working hours during UK business days.
Build a quote → WhatsApp +44 7908 749694 → Email us →

Related pages

If you process larger commercial volume, see the bulk & trade page for accounts and volume uplifts. For active strip-out operations, the selling pulled CPUs page covers packing tips and the workflow specifics. For the full kg-vs-part economic argument, read the scrap CPU buyer breakdown. For corporate decommission and ITAD providers, the ITAD CPU buyback page covers scheduled receiving and procurement-grade flows.