CPU Comparison
AMD Ryzen AI 5 430 vs Intel Core i7-11375H
A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The AMD Ryzen AI 5 430 is a 4-core, 8-thread mobile APU based on the Gorgon Point (Zen 5 + Zen 5c) architecture, with a 2.0 GHz base and up to 4.5 GHz boost, a 50 TOPS XDNA 2 NPU, and Radeon 840M integrated graphics, aimed at budget and mainstream Copilot+ laptops.
The Bottom Line
Overview & Launch
Specifications Compared
Performance Compared
Productivity
Smooth for everyday office tasks, web, and light creative work; more demanding multi-threaded workloads will expose the limits of 4 cores.
Snappy application launches and excellent single-threaded responsiveness.
Gaming
Radeon 840M can handle older or eSports titles at 1080p low settings, but it’s not suited for modern AAA gaming at high presets.
Delivers high framerates in esports titles when paired with a discrete GPU.
Virtualization
Basic VM use is fine, but limited cores and memory bandwidth constrain heavy virtualization workloads.
Limited by 4 cores; suitable for light VM usage but not heavy workloads.
Efficiency
4nm process and flexible 15–28W TDP deliver strong performance-per-watt in thin laptops.
The 28W TDP combined with 10nm SuperFin offers great performance per watt.
Specialized Performance
AI / ML
- Up to 50 TOPS NPU enables local AI features and small LLMs.
- Overall AI performance up to 58 TOPS when combining CPU/GPU/NPU.
- Not intended for training large models or heavy inference workloads.
- Features Intel DL Boost for basic AI workloads
- Not suitable for heavy local LLM inference due to 4-core limit
Content Creation
Gaming
- Radeon 840M is a step up from 2-CU Radeon 820M but still entry-level.
- Best suited for eSports and older titles at 1080p low–medium.
- Not ideal for AAA gaming at high refresh rates or high settings.
- Excels in CPU-bound esports scenarios like CS:GO and Valorant
- 5.0 GHz boost pushes high frame rates
- 4 cores may bottleneck modern AAA titles at ultra settings
Industry Impact
Best CPU by Use Case
Target Audience
Strengths & Weaknesses
Pros
- Efficient 4nm Zen 5 + Zen 5c design with strong single-thread response.
- 50 TOPS NPU enables meaningful local AI inference for Copilot+ features.
- Radeon 840M iGPU is a clear upgrade over 2-CU designs in the same class.
- Support for high-speed LPDDR5X-8000 and DDR5-5600 memory.
- Flexible 15–28W cTDP suits both thin-and-lights and small-form-factor desktops.
Cons
- Only 4 CPU cores limit heavy multi-threaded workloads.
- Entry-level iGPU still not suitable for serious AAA gaming.
- Locked multiplier and BGA packaging mean no user upgrades or overclocking.
- PCIe 4.0 only, while some competitors already offer PCIe 5.0.
- Compared to Ryzen AI 5 435, you lose two CPU cores and some L3 cache.
Pros
- Exceptional single-core clock speeds up to 5.0 GHz
- Low 28W base TDP ideal for thin chassis
- 20 PCIe 4.0 lanes for modern connectivity
- Excellent Iris Xe 96EU integrated graphics
Cons
- Only 4 cores and 8 threads
- Locked multiplier
- Outperformed by 8-core competitors in multi-threading
- Hard to find in modern laptop configurations
Competitors & Alternatives
AMD Ryzen AI 5 430
- Compare head-to-headIntel Core Ultra 5 226VRival
Budget / Mainstream Mobile
- Compare head-to-headIntel Core Ultra 5 225HRival
Mainstream Mobile
- AMD Ryzen 5 8540URival
Mainstream Mobile
- Compare head-to-headAMD Ryzen AI 5 435Rival
Mid-Range Mobile
- AMD Ryzen AI 5 330Rival
Entry-Level Mobile
Steps up to 6 cores and a faster iGPU for users who want better Creator and gaming performance without moving to a high-end SKU.
Compare head-to-head
Intel Core i7-11375H
- AMD Ryzen 7 5800URival
Thin-and-Light Mobile
- AMD Ryzen 7 5800HRival
High-Performance Mobile
- Compare head-to-headIntel Core i7-11800HRival
High-Performance Mobile
- Compare head-to-headApple M1Rival
ARM Mobile
- AMD Ryzen 5 5600HRival
High-Performance Mobile
Nearly identical performance at a slightly lower clock speed.
Compare head-to-head- Intel Core i5-11300HAlt
Better value if 5.0 GHz boost is not strictly necessary.
- Intel Core i7-1165G7Alt
Better power efficiency for non-gaming ultraportables.
Our Verdict on Each
A solid, efficient entry point into AMD’s Ryzen AI 400 lineup with strong AI and graphics features for the price, but limited CPU headroom for heavy multi-threaded workloads or serious gaming.
Best for: Budget to mainstream Copilot+ laptops where battery life, everyday responsiveness, and local AI features matter more than raw CPU or gaming performance.
Read the full reviewA specialized 4-core chip that excels in single-core workloads and esports gaming, though its core count limits heavy multi-threaded rendering.
Best for: Buying a lightweight, portable gaming laptop for esports
Read the full reviewFrequently Asked Questions
Which is better, AMD Ryzen AI 5 430 or Intel Core i7-11375H?
Based on our editorial ratings, the Intel Core i7-11375H comes out ahead with a score of 8.2/10. That said, the best choice depends on your workload — check the spec and performance breakdown above for gaming, productivity and efficiency differences.
Which is faster for gaming, AMD Ryzen AI 5 430 or Intel Core i7-11375H?
For gaming, the Intel Core i7-11375H leads with a gaming performance score of 85/100 among AMD Ryzen AI 5 430 and Intel Core i7-11375H.
Do AMD Ryzen AI 5 430 and Intel Core i7-11375H use the same socket?
No. They use different sockets (AMD Ryzen AI 5 430: FP8, Intel Core i7-11375H: Intel BGA 1449), so each needs a compatible motherboard.
Which is faster in multi-core benchmarks?
The AMD Ryzen AI 5 430 posts the highest multi-core benchmark score. Multi-core results: AMD Ryzen AI 5 430 (13,958), Intel Core i7-11375H (11,500). Benchmark figures are approximate and workload-dependent.