It looks like the sun is finally setting on Intel’s 12th Gen Alder Lake series, signaling the end of the road for one of the most impactful processor families we have seen in years. In a set of Product Change Notifications released on January 6, 2026, Intel confirmed what many enthusiasts knew was coming: the company is officially discontinuing a wide range of tray and boxed Alder Lake CPUs – covering everything from the heavy-hitting Core chips down to the Pentium Gold and Celeron G-series – along with the trusty 600-series chipsets like the H670, B660, and Z690. Effectively, the countdown to retirement has begun.
To understand why this matters, you have to look back at what Alder Lake actually did. When it dropped in late 2021, it was a genuine game-changer. It didn’t just bump up clock speeds; it fundamentally changed the architecture by introducing the hybrid P-core (performance) and E-core (efficiency) design to mainstream desktops. It also dragged us into the modern era by debuting support for DDR5 memory and PCIe 5.0.
Ironically, history might remember Alder Lake as the “dependable one” of the LGA1700 era
While its successors – Raptor Lake and the various refreshes – grabbed headlines for raw speed, they also dealt with some well-documented stability dramas in high-end configurations. Because of that, a lot of system builders stuck with 12th Gen chips way longer than usual simply because they were rock-solid reliable.
For system integrators and PC shops, the clock is ticking loud and clear. Intel has laid out a strict schedule: the deadline to submit final demand for these chips is April 10, 2026. After that, the window closes fast. The absolute last date to place orders is July 24, 2026, and once those orders are in, they are locked – no cancellations, no returns. Intel plans to ship the final batches by January 22, 2027.
If you are sitting next to an Alder Lake PC right now, don’t worry; your rig isn’t going to stop working
And motherboard makers will keep supporting the platform for a good while. However, if you have been planning a budget-friendly build using these parts, you might want to move fast. As the channel inventory dries up, you will likely see retailers clearing out stock, which could mean some great deals for bargain hunters. But realistically, if you are looking for an upgrade path, the door is closing.

As we wave goodbye to the 12th Gen, the industry’s eyes are already fixed on the future. The LGA1851 socket is already here with Arrow Lake, but the rumor mill is spinning about what comes after. There is already talk of LGA1954 and the “Nova Lake-S” architecture being the next massive leap for Intel. By the time the last Alder Lake box leaves the warehouse in 2027, the PC landscape will likely look completely different once again.
