Installing a CPU is the part of building a PC where first-timers get the most anxious — and with good reason. The CPU is the most expensive non-GPU component, the pins are tiny, and there’s a real (small) chance of damaging the socket if you rush. The good news is that if you go slowly and check the orientation, this is a 30-second operation. Here’s exactly how to do it.

Understand where the pins are

The first thing to know is which side has the pins, because it determines what you have to worry about.

  • AMD AM5 (current desktop): Pins are on the motherboard socket (LGA). Bottom of CPU has flat contact pads.
  • AMD AM4 (older Ryzen): Pins are on the CPU (PGA). Bottom of CPU has small protruding pins.
  • Intel LGA 1851 / LGA 1700 / etc.: Pins are on the motherboard socket.

For LGA sockets (the common case in 2026), you’re protecting the motherboard’s tiny socket pins. Don’t drop anything into the socket. Don’t poke it with anything. Don’t even let dust settle on it before installation.

Prep the workspace

Clear a flat, well-lit surface. Make sure your hands are clean and dry. Touch the bare metal of your case or PSU first to discharge static.

Unbox the CPU carefully. Don’t touch the bottom contacts with your fingers — finger oils can affect the contact. Hold it by the edges.

Open the socket

Look at the motherboard. The CPU socket is the square (or rectangular on AM5) metal frame with a lever on the side.

  1. Push the lever gently sideways to release it from the locking notch.
  2. Lift the lever up to its fully open position.
  3. Lift the retention frame (the hinged metal piece) until it stands up.
  4. If there’s a plastic socket cover, leave it for now. It will pop off when you close the frame with the CPU installed. Some sockets have a separate cover that lifts off; check the manual.

Identify the orientation

This is the only place mistakes can happen, and it’s why we go slowly.

The CPU has a small golden triangle on one corner. The socket has a matching triangle on one corner (look at the corner of the retention frame, or marked on the motherboard PCB near the socket). These two triangles must align.

Some sockets also have small notches on two sides of the CPU substrate that match physical protrusions in the socket. These prevent installation in the wrong orientation entirely.

Look at both triangles. Hold the CPU above the socket in the correct orientation and visually confirm before lowering.

Lower the CPU into the socket

Hold the CPU by the edges, parallel to the socket. Lower it straight down. Do not slide. Do not tilt. Just drop it gently — gravity is enough.

The CPU should sit flat in the socket with no gap on any side. If it’s not flat, lift it straight up, check the orientation, and try again. Never force it.