- RTX Pro 5000 Blackwell supports up to 72GB GDDR7 memory with ECC
- The Blackwell architecture offers 14,080 CUDA cores and enhanced Tensor and Ray Tracing cores.
- Multi-instance GPU support allows a single card to be split into multiple virtual GPUs
The Nvidia RTX Pro 5000 Blackwell increases memory capacity, offering configurations of up to 72 GB of GDDR7 memory with ECC support.
Its 512-bit memory interface offers a theoretical bandwidth of 1.344 TB/s and supports high-resolution simulations, large models, and data sets commonly found in workstation environments.
The GPU uses the Blackwell architecture and includes 14,080 CUDA cores, fifth-generation Tensor Cores optimized for FP4 precision, and fourth-generation Ray Tracing Cores that handle complex geometric calculations.
Core architecture and computing specifications
The card includes an AI management processor and multi-instance GPU (MIG) support, allowing it to split across multiple virtual GPUs and support parallel engineering and simulation workloads.
This professional graphics card supports up to four DisplayPort 2.1b outputs with maximum digital resolutions exceeding 7680 x 4320 at 60 Hz.
The system interface is PCIe 5.0×16, which provides high-speed communication between the GPU and CPU and helps move large data sets without creating bottlenecks in demanding workstation applications.
Nvidia also updated its video engines, adding 9th-generation NVENC and 6th-generation NVDEC with 4:2:2 support.
These engines accelerate the encoding and decoding of high-resolution video streams used in specialized engineering and visualization tasks.
The RTX Pro 5000 Blackwell includes enhanced streaming multiprocessors combined with AI-enabled Tensor Cores, targeting workloads that rely heavily on GPU compute.
Its single-precision floating-point performance reaches 65 TFLOPS, while RT Core performance peaks at 196 TFLOPS.
Despite these specifications, real-world performance depends on application optimization, CPU matching, and how efficiently the software uses available memory.
Users running simulation, 3D modeling, or CAD software will likely see the most benefit when working with very large data sets or multi-GPU partitions, although many engineering workloads are still limited by CPU performance or software design.
The card consumes 300W through a single 16-pin PCIe power connector and uses a dual-slot, full-height form factor.
An active cooling solution maintains thermal stability during sustained workloads, which suits professional environments where systems typically operate for extended periods.
Its full-length 10.5-inch design requires careful planning when selecting a compatible workstation chassis.
The 48GB RTX Pro 5000 Blackwell is priced at $4,199.99 and moving up to a 72GB configuration is expected to increase the price even further.
Using simple “GB for GB” math, the highest capacity version would cost around $6,300, putting it above many competing professional cards from Nvidia and other vendors.
With Nvidia’s 96GB RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell Workstation Edition now costing just over $7,500 after recent price adjustments, the expected price of the RTX Pro 5000 Blackwell raises questions about overall value.
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