CPU Comparison

Intel Core i5-6500 vs Intel Core i5-4670

A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The Intel Core i5-6500 is a 6th generation Skylake quad-core processor designed for mainstream desktop users, offering solid base performance and DDR4 memory support without the premium of an unlocked multiplier.

Intel · Core i5
Intel Core i5-6500
4C / 4T3.6 GHz65 W
7
Full review
Top pick
Intel · Core i5
Intel Core i5-4670
4C / 4T3.8 GHz84 W
7.4
Full review

The Bottom Line

Overview & Launch

Brand
Intel
Intel
Market
Desktop
Desktop
Segment
Mainstream Desktop
Mid-Range Desktop
Generation
6th Gen (Skylake)
4th Gen (Haswell)
Launched
2015
2013
Status
End-of-life
Discontinued
Codename
Skylake
Haswell
Series
Core i5
Core i5
Family
6th Gen (Skylake)
4th Generation (Haswell)
Predecessor
Intel Core i5-4590
Intel Core i5-3570
Successor
Intel Core i5-7500
Intel Core i5-4690

Specifications Compared

Cores & Clocks
Cores
4
4
Threads
4
4
Base Clock
3.2 GHz
3.4 GHz
Boost Clock
3.6 GHz
3.8 GHz
Cache & Power
L3 Cache
6 MB
6 MB
TDP
65 W
84 W
Architecture
Architecture
Skylake
Haswell
Process Node
14nm
22nm
Memory
Memory Type
DDR4
DDR3
Memory Speed
DDR4-2133
DDR3-1600
Memory Channels
Dual (2)
Dual (2)
Max Memory
64 GB
32 GB
Platform & I/O
Socket
LGA 1151
LGA 1150
PCIe Version
PCIe 3.0
PCIe 3.0
PCIe Lanes
16
16
Integrated GPU
Yes
Yes
Unlocked
No
No

Performance Compared

Productivity

Intel Core i5-650040

Lacks the thread count for modern multi-tasking and rendering workloads.

Intel Core i5-4670Best45

The fastest locked Haswell i5 at launch, with 3.8 GHz turbo benefiting bursty office and development workloads.

Gaming

Intel Core i5-6500Best55

Bottlenecks modern GPUs heavily in newer titles; fine for older or esports games.

Intel Core i5-467052

The 3.8 GHz turbo provides the best single-threaded performance among launch Haswell i5s, helping in older games, but four threads remain a hard limit for modern titles.

Virtualization

Intel Core i5-650030

Very limited for running VMs due to 4 threads.

Intel Core i5-467030

vPro and VT-d features are excellent for IT management, but four threads limit practical virtualization workloads.

Efficiency

Intel Core i5-6500Best70

65W TDP is easy to cool and fairly efficient for a 14nm quad-core.

Intel Core i5-467048

84W TDP is the standard for the Haswell i5 lineup; the higher clocks do not come with a power penalty thanks to good binning.

Specialized Performance

AI / ML

Intel Core i5-6500Very Poor
  • No AI hardware acceleration
  • 4 threads severely limit local LLM and inference capabilities
Intel Core i5-4670Not Supported
  • No dedicated AI acceleration hardware
  • AVX2 and FMA3 available for basic vector operations
  • DDR3 bandwidth constrains any AI inference workload
  • Not suitable for local AI applications

Content Creation

Intel Core i5-6500Poor
Basic Photo EditingLight 1080p Video Editing
Intel Core i5-4670Poor
Photoshop (Basic to Moderate Editing)Lightroom (Photo Management)Visual Studio (Code Compilation)IntelliJ IDEA (Java Development)Audacity (Audio Production)

Gaming

Intel Core i5-6500Fair
  • Severe 1% low frame drops in modern CPU-heavy games
  • Adequate for CS:GO and Valorant
  • No overclocking headroom to alleviate bottlenecks
Intel Core i5-4670Fair
  • 3.8 GHz turbo is the fastest among launch locked Haswell i5s
  • Good for eSports and older AAA titles with a dedicated GPU
  • Bottlenecks modern mid-range GPUs in CPU-intensive titles
  • No Hyper-Threading limits 1% low frame rates
  • Best paired with GTX 1060 or RX 580 class GPUs

Industry Impact

Gaming
Moderate
Workstations
Low
Content Creation
Low
Virtualization
Low

Best CPU by Use Case

1080p eSports Gaming
Fair
Web Browsing & Office
Good
Home Theater PC
Good
Video Editing
Poor
Streaming
Poor
Business Desktop
Good
1080p Gaming with dGPU
Fair
IT-Managed Workstation
Good
Software Development
Fair
Modern Gaming
Poor

Target Audience

Gamers
Targeted
Content Creators
Developers
Targeted
Workstation Users
Streamers
Office / Productivity
Targeted
Targeted
Students
Targeted

Strengths & Weaknesses

Intel Core i5-6500

Pros

  • Low 65W TDP, easy to cool
  • Solid IPC for its generation
  • Included a stock cooler
  • HD 530 iGPU for troubleshooting

Cons

  • Only 4 threads without Hyper-Threading
  • Locked multiplier prevents overclocking
  • Struggles with modern gaming workloads
  • End-of-life platform with no upgrade path
Intel Core i5-4670

Pros

  • Fastest locked Haswell i5 at launch with 3.8 GHz turbo
  • vPro technology for enterprise IT management
  • TXT and TSX for security and transactional memory
  • Full instruction set including BMI1/BMI2 and F16C
  • Strong single-threaded performance for its era

Cons

  • vPro features unnecessary for most home users
  • More expensive than i5-4570 with negligible gaming performance difference
  • Locked multiplier prevents overclocking
  • 84W TDP is inefficient by modern standards
  • DDR3 memory platform is obsolete
  • Quickly superseded by Devils Canyon i5-4690
  • TSX disabled on C0 stepping via microcode errata

Competitors & Alternatives

Intel Core i5-6500

  • AMD FX-8350

    Mainstream Desktop

    Rival
  • AMD FX-6350

    Budget Desktop

    Rival
  • Intel Core i5-4590

    Previous Gen

    Rival
    Compare head-to-head
  • Intel Core i3-6100

    Budget Desktop

    Rival
  • AMD A10-7870K

    APU Desktop

    Rival
  • Modern budget king that easily outpaces the i5-6500 in all metrics.

    Compare head-to-head
  • AMD Ryzen 5 5600G
    Alt

    Incredible integrated graphics and 12 threads for a similar used price.

  • Intel Core i5-12400F
    Alt

    The modern equivalent with vastly superior multi-threading and gaming performance.

  • AMD Ryzen 5 3600
    Alt

    Older but highly capable 6-core/12-thread CPU on a cheap platform.

  • Provides 12 threads on a budget LGA 1200 platform.

    Compare head-to-head

Intel Core i5-4670

Our Verdict on Each

A reliable workhorse in its day, the i5-6500 delivered excellent value for locked mainstream builds, though its 4-thread limitation renders it obsolete for modern heavy workloads.

Best for: The i5-6500 is only viable today if you are repairing an older LGA 1151 system on an extreme budget or building a basic home server. It can handle web browsing, office applications, and retro or esports gaming adequately. However, buying one new or even used at a high price makes no sense. Modern entry-level chips like the i3-12100F obliterate it in single-core and multi-core performance while offering a modern platform with an upgrade path. If you already own this chip, keep it as long as your tasks remain basic, but do not invest money into this platform expecting a noticeable uplift over your existing setup without moving to a newer generation.

Read the full review

The fastest locked Haswell i5 at launch with unique vPro and TXT enterprise features. A strong performer in its day, but quickly superseded by Devils Canyon and rendered obsolete by modern budget CPUs.

Best for: Repairing an enterprise desktop system that requires vPro features on LGA 1150

Read the full review

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Intel Core i5-6500 or Intel Core i5-4670?

Based on our editorial ratings, the Intel Core i5-4670 comes out ahead with a score of 7.4/10. 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, Intel Core i5-6500 or Intel Core i5-4670?

For gaming, the Intel Core i5-6500 leads with a gaming performance score of 55/100 among Intel Core i5-6500 and Intel Core i5-4670.

Which uses less power?

The Intel Core i5-6500 has the lowest rated TDP. Power draw across these chips: Intel Core i5-6500 (65 W), Intel Core i5-4670 (84 W).

Do Intel Core i5-6500 and Intel Core i5-4670 use the same socket?

No. They use different sockets (Intel Core i5-6500: LGA 1151, Intel Core i5-4670: LGA 1150), so each needs a compatible motherboard.

Which is faster in multi-core benchmarks?

The Intel Core i5-6500 posts the highest multi-core benchmark score. Multi-core results: Intel Core i5-6500 (5,400), Intel Core i5-4670 (4,620). Benchmark figures are approximate and workload-dependent.