There are dozens of parts in a PC build, and almost any one of them can be incompatible with another in some way. Wrong socket, wrong RAM type, wrong GPU length for your case — small mistakes that cost real money to fix. The good news is that compatibility checking follows a predictable pattern. Here’s the whole picture.

Start with the CPU

Pick your CPU first because everything else cascades from this choice. Once you pick a CPU, you’ve also chosen:

  • The motherboard socket type.
  • The RAM generation you need.
  • Roughly the wattage range for your PSU.
  • Whether you have integrated graphics or need a dedicated GPU.

The two main platforms in 2026 are AMD AM5 (Ryzen 7000, 8000, 9000) and Intel LGA 1851 (Core Ultra 200 series). Both use DDR5 only. Older Intel LGA 1700 boards (12th, 13th, 14th gen) support DDR4 on some boards and DDR5 on others — check before buying.

Match the motherboard

The motherboard has to match:

CPU socket

AM5, LGA 1851, LGA 1700, etc. — these are physical sockets and not interchangeable.

CPU support list

Even within the same socket, not every motherboard supports every CPU out of the box. Newer CPUs may need a BIOS update before they’ll boot. Manufacturer websites list which BIOS version added support for each CPU.

RAM type

AM5 = DDR5 only. LGA 1851 = DDR5 only. LGA 1700 = either DDR4 or DDR5, depending on the specific board.

Form factor

ATX, Micro-ATX, or Mini-ITX. Your case must support this size.

Match the RAM

Three things matter:

  • Type: DDR4 or DDR5 to match the motherboard.
  • Speed: stay within the motherboard’s supported range. For AMD AM5, the sweet spot is DDR5-6000 CL30. For Intel LGA 1851, DDR5-6400 to DDR5-7200.
  • Capacity: 16GB minimum, 32GB ideal in 2026.

Always buy a matched kit (e.g., a 2x16GB kit, not two 16GB sticks bought separately). Check the motherboard’s QVL (Qualified Vendor List) on the manufacturer site if you want extra peace of mind, especially for high-speed kits.

Match the cooler

Coolers must fit: