AMD introduced EXPO Ultra Low Latency at Computex 2026 as an updated memory profile standard, promising tighter timings and around 4% better gaming performance over standard EXPO. AMD also suggested pricing would stay close to existing EXPO kits. But the first retail listings from G.Skill show that unlocking those gains will cost you.
G.Skill's Trident Z5 NeoX RGB series has appeared on Newegg in 32GB DDR5-6000 configurations with EXPO ULL support. The premium over the standard Trident Z5 Neo kits ranges from 10% to as high as 79%, depending on the timing tier.
The C26 NeoX kit is listed at $1,099.99, compared to $699.99 for the standard C26, translating to about a 57% premium. The C28 NeoX is $999.99, compared to $559.99 for the standard version, which amounts to a 79% premium for a kit with two fewer CAS cycles. The gap narrows considerably at looser timings, with the C30 NeoX at $619.99 running 14% above the standard C30, and the C36 NeoX at $549.99 sitting just 10% higher. In other words, the price jumps are steepest where the latency gains are most aggressive.

At Computex, AMD's David McAfee said the company's understanding from memory partners was that EXPO ULL kits would come in "at effectively the same price points that the current kits are at." But that is clearly not where things have landed.
To be fair, the NeoX kits do bring meaningful technical differences. The C26, C28, and C30 variants lower tRAS from 96 cycles on standard Neo kits down to 32 cycles. The C26 and C28 NeoX kits also run at 1.35V, compared to 1.45V and 1.40V on their standard counterparts, which reduces operating temperatures and provides more headroom for manual overclocking. The tighter binning required to hit these timings reliably is the real cost driver here, and that process is not cheap, especially on top of already-elevated DRAM prices.

AMD is claiming a 4% average gaming performance improvement over standard EXPO. Even so, paying 79% more for a 4% gain is a difficult case to make, regardless of how good the underlying engineering is. For enthusiasts chasing the lowest possible latency or extra overclocking headroom, the voltage and tRAS improvements have genuine appeal. For everyone else, standard EXPO kits remain the more sensible option, particularly given how expensive memory already is right now.
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More manufacturers are expected to bring EXPO ULL kits to market over time, and broader competition could bring prices down.









