AMD says its Ryzen AI Halo mini-PC will "pay for itself" in just a few months of use and it's coming in June. The compact system, built around the Ryzen AI MAX+ 395 chip and packing 128GB of unified memory, is AMD's direct answer to NVIDIA's DGX Spark that debuted in October 2025.

Priced at $3999, the Halo Box is aimed squarely at local AI development and enterprise workloads that demand high performance and portability. The Ryzen AI Halo is based on AMD's Strix Halo platform and features a powerful integrated RDNA 3.5 GPU, 16 Zen 5 cores, and support for both Windows and Linux.
It's designed to run complex AI models locally without relying on cloud infrastructure, making it ideal for developers and businesses focused on privacy and latency-sensitive applications. AMD claims the system will deliver enough efficiency and performance to offset its cost quickly in real-world use cases.
This move signals AMD's growing push into the AI workstation and AI-focused mini-PC market. By offering a self-contained, high-performance solution at a competitive price, the company is attempting to compete in a space currently dominated by NVIDIA. The Halo Box is also one of the many key steps in AMD's broad strategy to expand its presence in various AI markets.
With a June launch window confirmed, AMD is now focused on delivering the Halo Box as a viable alternative to more expensive, cloud-dependent solutions. If the system can live up to its promises, it could shift the landscape for local AI development and give developers a more affordable, portable option for running large models.





