Skip to main content
AMD Motherboards 🖥️

AMD Motherboards 🖥️

An AMD motherboard decides which Ryzen CPU you can run, what memory you can fit, and how much storage and expansion you get. Choose the board around your processor first — the socket has to match, and it also fixes your memory type.

Current Ryzen desktop chips use the AM5 socket with DDR5 memory; the long-running AM4 platform takes Ryzen 5000 and earlier with DDR4. AM5 boards (X870, B850, B650 and similar) and AM4 boards (B550, X570) are not cross-compatible. AMD allows CPU overclocking on more chipsets than Intel, so even a mid-range board can tune a capable CPU. We stock ATX, Micro-ATX and Mini-ITX across both platforms.

Every AMD motherboard at Evetech ships with local warranty and nationwide delivery, backed by South Africa's largest gaming hardware retailer. AM4 remains a strong-value path for budget and upgrade builds; AM5 is the platform to build on for the long term. Match the board to your CPU, RAM and case below.

AMD Motherboards for Ryzen — AM5 & AM4 (42)

Filters

Price Range

R1 249R33 999

How to Choose an AMD Motherboard

Start with the socket your Ryzen CPU uses, because that also locks in your memory type. From there, the chipset sets your features — PCIe lanes, M.2 slots, USB and networking — and the form factor decides what fits your case. The points below cover what changes your build.

AM5 is the current socket for the newest Ryzen desktop CPUs and uses DDR5. AM4 is the older, still-stocked platform for Ryzen 5000 and earlier, using DDR4 — a strong value path for budget and upgrade builds. The two sockets share no boards or RAM, so choose your CPU first.
X-series boards (e.g. X870, X570) give the most PCIe lanes, fastest connectivity and the best power delivery for high-end CPUs. B-series (e.g. B850, B650, B550) is the mainstream sweet spot and still supports CPU overclocking on AMD. A-series entry chipsets cover budget and office builds with fewer features.
AM5 boards take DDR5 only; AM4 boards take DDR4 only — you can't reuse the wrong type. Form factor decides fit: ATX gives the most slots and expansion, Micro-ATX is a compact all-rounder, and Mini-ITX suits small-form-factor builds with a single GPU.
AMD is more generous than Intel here — CPU overclocking and memory tuning work on B-series as well as X-series boards, so you don't need the top chipset to push a capable Ryzen chip. Higher-tier boards add stronger power delivery and cooling on the VRM, which helps sustained overclocks stay stable.
Check the number of M.2 slots and which run at full PCIe speed if you plan several NVMe drives. Confirm a full-length x16 slot for your GPU with room for its size. Higher-tier boards add Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, 2.5G LAN and more USB-C — worth it for a wireless or peripheral-heavy setup.
EvetechYou Dream It, We Build It

Elevating your gaming experience with premium hardware and cutting-edge technology since 2007.

Stay updated

Get the latest deals and tech news

Hours

Mon–Fri: 9am – 4pm

Sat: 9am – 12pm

Copyright © 2007 - 2026 - All rights reserved by EVETECH (Pty) Ltd

All images appearing on this website are copyright Evetech.co.za. Any unauthorized use of its logos and other graphics is forbidden. Prices and specifications are subject to change without notice. EVETECH IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY TYPO, PHOTOGRAPH, OR PROGRAM ERRORS, AND RESERVES THE RIGHT TO CANCEL ANY INCORRECT ORDERS. Please Note: Product images are for illustrative purposes only and may differ from the actual product.