CPU Comparison

Intel Core 5 213PTE vs Intel Core 5 223PTE

A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The Intel Core 5 213PTE is an 8-core, 16-thread desktop processor built on the Bartlett Lake architecture, specifically tailored for embedded systems and commercial deployments. Operating at a highly efficient 45W base TDP, it features 8 Redwood Cove P-Cores capable of boosting up to 5.2 GHz. It uniquely supports both DDR4 and DDR5 memory, providing system integrators with unparalleled flexibility when upgrading legacy LGA 1700 infrastructures. Equipped with 16 lanes of PCIe 5.0, UHD Graphics 730, and enterprise-focused technologies like TSN and ECC memory support, the 213PTE is designed to deliver reliable, long-lifecycle performance in digital signage, industrial control, and edge computing environments where consistent power delivery and thermal stability outweigh the need for extreme gaming performance.

Intel · Core 5
Intel Core 5 213PTE
8C / 16T5.2 GHz45 W
7.5
Full review
Top pick
Intel · Core 5
Intel Core 5 223PTE
8C / 16T5.4 GHz45 W
7.8
Full review

The Bottom Line

Overview & Launch

Brand
Intel
Intel
Market
Desktop
Embedded/Industrial Desktop
Segment
Desktop
Generation
Core 5 (Bartlett Lake)
Intel Core Processors Series 2 (Bartlett Lake 12P)
Launched
2026
2026
Status
Active
Active
Codename
Bartlett Lake
Bartlett Lake
Series
Core 5
Core 5
Family
Bartlett Lake (Core 5)
Bartlett Lake (Core 5)
Predecessor
Intel 12th/13th/14th Gen i5 (e.g., i5-12400/13400/14400) in embedded/industrial designs
Successor
TBD (Intel has not announced a direct successor for Bartlett Lake 12P embedded line)

Specifications Compared

Cores & Clocks
Cores
8
8
Threads
16
16
Base Clock
2.1 GHz
2.3 GHz
Boost Clock
5.2 GHz
5.4 GHz
Cache & Power
L3 Cache
24 MB
24 MB
TDP
45 W
45 W
Architecture
Architecture
Bartlett Lake (Redwood Cove P-Cores)
Bartlett Lake (Raptor Cove P‑cores only)
Process Node
10 nm (Intel 7)
Intel 7 (10 nm class)
Memory
Memory Type
DDR4, DDR5
DDR5-5600 and DDR4-3200 (dual-channel); ECC supported
Memory Speed
DDR4-3200, DDR5-4800
DDR5 up to 5600 MT/s; DDR4 up to 3200 MT/s
Memory Channels
Dual (2)
Dual (2)
Max Memory
192 GB
Platform & I/O
Socket
LGA 1700
FCLGA1700 (Intel Socket 1700)
PCIe Version
PCIe 5.0
PCIe 5.0 and 4.0
PCIe Lanes
16
20
Integrated GPU
Yes
Yes
Unlocked
No
No

Performance Compared

Productivity

Intel Core 5 213PTE

Eight physical cores provide solid multi-threaded throughput for office applications and light productivity tasks.

Intel Core 5 223PTE0

With eight P‑cores and HT, it should handle typical office and light creator workloads competently. Official benchmark scores are not available at this time.

Gaming

Intel Core 5 213PTE

While equipped with UHD Graphics 730 and capable of handling casual or legacy titles, this processor is not targeted at gaming workloads.

Intel Core 5 223PTE0

Not marketed for gaming. The 223PTE can drive lightweight or legacy titles and eSports at 1080p with the iGPU, but its value lies elsewhere.

Efficiency

Intel Core 5 213PTE

Extremely efficient at base load with a 45W TDP, though it can draw up to 219W during short turbo bursts.

Intel Core 5 223PTE0

At 45 W base power and with P‑core‑only operation, 223PTE is tuned for efficiency and consistent behavior in thermally constrained environments.

Specialized Performance

AI / ML

Intel Core 5 213PTELimited
  • No dedicated NPU
  • Relies on standard AVX2 and VNNI instructions for CPU-based AI inference
Intel Core 5 223PTECPU‑only Inference (Basic)
  • Intel DL Boost is listed, enabling VNNI/INT8 acceleration on CPU for compatible workloads via OpenVINO and other tools.
  • There is no discrete NPU or GPU‑based AI accelerator; heavy AI workloads should use a dedicated GPU or other accelerators.
  • For edge AI, vendors often pair Bartlett Lake with entry‑level Arc or other GPUs.

Content Creation

Intel Core 5 213PTEGood
Adobe PhotoshopMicrosoft Office SuiteLight Video EditingCAD Drafting
Intel Core 5 223PTEAdequate
Adobe Photoshop/Lightroom (light to moderate edits)1080p video editing in Premiere Pro or DaVinci ResolveLight coding and IDE workloadsLocal inference for small models via CPU (no dedicated AI accelerator)

Gaming

Intel Core 5 213PTEPoor
  • Lacks high-frequency gaming optimization
  • UHD 730 iGPU is not suitable for modern AAA gaming
  • Locked multiplier prevents enthusiast tuning
Intel Core 5 223PTENot Targeted
  • The 223PTE is not marketed or positioned as a gaming processor.
  • The UHD 770 iGPU can handle older or eSports titles at 1080p, but discrete GPUs are recommended for modern AAA gaming.
  • Motherboards and BIOSes for Bartlett Lake are typically industrial/embedded-focused and may lack enthusiast tuning features.

Industry Impact

Gaming
Minimal
Low
Workstations
Moderate
Moderate
Content Creation
Low
Moderate
Virtualization
Moderate

Best CPU by Use Case

Digital Signage
Excellent
Industrial Control Systems
Excellent
Office Productivity
Excellent
Light Content Creation
Good
Software Development
Good
Industrial control and HMI
Very Good
Digital signage and kiosks (multi‑display)
Excellent
Edge gateway and IoT aggregation
Very Good
Light content creation (photo edits, 1080p timelines)
Good
General office and productivity
Very Good

Target Audience

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

Strengths & Weaknesses

Intel Core 5 213PTE

Pros

  • 45W base TDP for excellent idle and base-load efficiency
  • Support for both DDR4 and DDR5 memory
  • PCIe 5.0 support for modern storage and GPUs
  • Includes UHD Graphics 730 for headless or display-heavy setups
  • Hardware-level security features like TME and TXT

Cons

  • Locked multiplier
  • High PL2 turbo power of 219W requires adequate cooling headroom
  • No E-Cores for background task offloading
  • Limited chipset support focused on enterprise and embedded boards
  • Not optimized for high-refresh-rate gaming
Intel Core 5 223PTE

Pros

  • Eight Raptor Cove P‑cores with HT provide predictable, strong per‑core and multi‑thread performance for edge workloads.
  • 45 W base power suits compact, passively cooled or fan‑constrained enclosures.
  • Dual‑channel DDR5‑5600 and DDR4‑3200 with ECC support.
  • Up to 20 PCIe lanes from the CPU (PCIe 5.0 + 4.0) for flexible GPU and NVMe attachment.
  • UHD 770 with 32 EUs supports up to four displays, useful for signage and monitoring.
  • Validated with embedded chipsets (R680E, Q670E, H610E, W680) and industrial boards.
  • Drop‑in compatible with existing LGA1700 designs, easing upgrades for OEMs.
  • Intel DL Boost (VNNI) enables CPU‑based inference acceleration.

Cons

  • Not targeted at consumer gaming; limited enthusiast motherboard support.
  • Multiplier locked; manual overclocking is not supported.
  • Official Max Turbo Power (PL2) and PL2 Tau values are not published on Intel ARK for 223PTE and could not be verified from authoritative sources at this time.
  • Platform and BIOS support are oriented to OEMs/industrial customers, not DIY enthusiasts.
  • No E‑cores; for some highly threaded workloads, hybrid predecessors may behave differently.

Competitors & Alternatives

Intel Core 5 213PTE

Intel Core 5 223PTE

  • AMD Ryzen 5 5600G

    Integrated-graphics desktop APU (AM4)

    Rival
  • AMD Ryzen 5 8600G

    Integrated-graphics desktop APU (AM5, RDNA3 iGPU)

    Rival
  • Intel Core i5-12400

    Mainstream desktop CPU (LGA1700, no ECC by default)

    Rival
  • Intel Core i5-14400

    Mainstream desktop CPU (LGA1700, hybrid P+E cores)

    Rival
    Compare head-to-head
  • Intel Core 5 223PE (65 W variant)

    Bartlett Lake embedded (higher base power, same cores/cache)

    Rival
  • Lower-clocked Bartlett Lake 45 W part (2.1 GHz base, 5.2 GHz boost, 24 EU iGPU) for cost-sensitive edge designs.

    Compare head-to-head
  • 65 W Bartlett Lake variant (2.9 GHz base, 5.4 GHz boost) if higher sustained clocks are acceptable within your thermal budget.

    Compare head-to-head
  • Intel Core i5-12400/14400
    Alt

    If your deployment does not need ECC, LTSC focus, or TCC/TSN, mainstream LGA1700 CPUs may offer broader motherboard choice.

  • AMD Ryzen 5 8600G (AM5)
    Alt

    If your priority is stronger integrated graphics (RDNA3) and a consumer ecosystem with frequent BIOS updates.

  • Intel Core 7 253PTE (Bartlett Lake)
    Alt

    If you need more cores/threads (10 P‑cores) for heavier edge workloads, at higher power and cost.

Our Verdict on Each

A highly efficient 8-core processor tailored for embedded and commercial use cases, offering modern connectivity like PCIe 5.0 and dual DDR4/DDR5 memory support within a strict 45W power envelope.

Best for: The Intel Core 5 213PTE is best suited for system integrators and enterprise buyers building commercial desktops, interactive kiosks, digital signage arrays, or light industrial control systems. Its unique combination of a 45W base power draw, dual DDR4/DDR5 memory support, and PCIe 5.0 connectivity makes it an ideal drop-in upgrade for existing LGA 1700 embedded systems. The inclusion of TSN and ECC memory support ensures data integrity and precise network timing required in manufacturing and enterprise environments. It provides ample multi-threaded performance for office productivity, lightweight virtualization, and edge computing tasks without the premium cost or power draw of high-end consumer CPUs.

Read the full review

A well-balanced, 45 W, P‑core‑only Bartlett Lake part that trades enthusiast overclocking for embedded-friendly features like ECC, LTSC support, and TCC/TSN readiness. Best suited for edge appliances and industrial PCs rather than DIY gaming builds.

Best for: OEMs, system integrators, and deployers building edge appliances, industrial PCs, digital‑signage players, or control systems that need LGA1700 longevity, ECC support, multi‑display outputs, and long‑term supply commitments.

Read the full review

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Intel Core 5 213PTE or Intel Core 5 223PTE?

Based on our editorial ratings, the Intel Core 5 223PTE comes out ahead with a score of 7.8/10. 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 5 213PTE or Intel Core 5 223PTE?

For gaming, the Intel Core 5 223PTE leads with a gaming performance score of 0/100 among Intel Core 5 213PTE and Intel Core 5 223PTE.

Do Intel Core 5 213PTE and Intel Core 5 223PTE use the same socket?

No. They use different sockets (Intel Core 5 213PTE: LGA 1700, Intel Core 5 223PTE: FCLGA1700 (Intel Socket 1700)), so each needs a compatible motherboard.

Which is faster in multi-core benchmarks?

The Intel Core 5 223PTE posts the highest multi-core benchmark score. Multi-core results: Intel Core 5 223PTE (0). Benchmark figures are approximate and workload-dependent.