MSI Pro H810M-E
mATX H810 board for LGA1851 CPUs, DDR5 memory, no BIOS Flashback - watch for BIOS update needs.
Official India stock. Full warranty through the brand's India service network, standard RMA if anything goes wrong.
Full specs
Where to buy MSI Pro H810M-E in India
Expect to pay roughly ₹7,600-8,400 for the MSI Pro H810M-E in India right now, depending on offers and seller. I always recommend buying from retailers that give a proper GST invoice - it's what makes your India warranty claim smooth later.
In my years running a PC store, PrimeABGB (Mumbai) and Vedant Computers (Kolkata) have also been consistently reliable for verified stock - compare before buying.
MSI Pro H810M-E Review India: The Cheapest Way Onto LGA1851
A New Chipset Family on GetPC
I haven't covered H810 on the site before now, so let's set context. H810 is Intel's entry-level chipset for LGA1851, the socket for Core Ultra 200 series ("Arrow Lake") desktop CPUs. It sits below B860 and Z890 in Intel's stack the same way H610 sat below B760 on the previous platform: DDR5 memory (mandatory here, unlike H610's DDR4), fewer PCIe lanes, fewer USB ports, and zero CPU overclocking support.
The MSI Pro H810M-E is a clean, no-frills execution of that spec. mATX form factor, basic VRM, single M.2 slot for your boot drive, and MSI's usual Pro-series BIOS that's easy enough for a first build.
The K-Chip Problem, Said Honestly
Here's a wrinkle worth flagging directly: H810 doesn't support CPU overclocking, but GetPC's current CPU catalog only lists K and KF variants of Core Ultra (Core Ultra 5 245K, Core Ultra 5 245KF, Core Ultra 7 265KF). Pairing an unlocked K-chip with a board that can't unlock it means you're leaving overclocking headroom on the table.
That's not disqualifying, it's just a trade-off you should make with eyes open. If you're planning to run any of those chips at stock clocks anyway, and plenty of people do, this board saves you real money over a B860 or Z890 board without costing you anything you were going to use. If overclocking is part of the plan, step up to B860M Gaming WIFI or MSI MAG B860 Tomahawk instead.
India Pricing and Availability
At ~₹7,900 against an MRP of ₹17,999, the discount here is steep, and I've verified it's holding at MDComputers rather than being a one-off flash sale price. This makes it one of the cheapest full boards available for any current-gen Intel platform, mirroring where H610 sits on the older LGA1700 side.
Who Should Buy / Who Should Skip
Buy this if you're building a budget Arrow Lake system, plan to run your CPU at stock clocks, and want to put savings toward the GPU or storage instead of the motherboard.
Skip this if overclocking is part of your plan for a K-series chip, or you want the extra M.2 slots and I/O of a B860 board for future upgrades.
Questions
No. H810 has no CPU overclocking support, and pairing an unlocked K-chip here means you're running it at stock regardless of the CPU's own headroom.
Yes, it's Intel's entry-tier chipset for LGA1851, the same budget role H610 played for LGA1700. It hasn't been on GetPC's motherboard list until now.
DDR5 only. Unlike H610, which mostly shipped DDR4, H810 boards use DDR5 across the board.