CPU Comparison

Intel Core i5-4570 vs Intel Core i5-4590T

A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The Intel Core i5-4570 is a launch-day Haswell quad-core desktop processor offering 3.2 GHz base and 3.6 GHz turbo clocks with HD 4600 integrated graphics, positioned as the mainstream workhorse of the 4th generation lineup.

Top pick
Intel · Core i5
Intel Core i5-4570
4C / 4T3.6 GHz84 W
7.2
Full review
Intel · Core i5
Intel Core i5-4590T
4C / 4T3 GHz35 W
6.5
Full review

The Bottom Line

Overview & Launch

Brand
Intel
Intel
Market
Desktop
Desktop
Segment
Mid-Range Desktop
Low-Power Desktop
Generation
4th Gen (Haswell)
4th Gen (Haswell)
Launched
2013
2014
Status
Discontinued
Discontinued
Codename
Haswell
Haswell
Series
Core i5
Core i5
Family
4th Generation (Haswell)
4th Generation (Haswell)
Predecessor
Intel Core i5-3570
Intel Core i5-4570T
Successor
Intel Core i5-4590
Intel Core i5-4690T

Specifications Compared

Cores & Clocks
Cores
4
4
Threads
4
4
Base Clock
3.2 GHz
2 GHz
Boost Clock
3.6 GHz
3 GHz
Cache & Power
L3 Cache
6 MB
6 MB
TDP
84 W
35 W
Architecture
Architecture
Haswell
Haswell
Process Node
22nm
22nm
Memory
Memory Type
DDR3
DDR3
Memory Speed
DDR3-1600
DDR3-1600
Memory Channels
Dual (2)
Dual (2)
Max Memory
32 GB
32 GB
Platform & I/O
Socket
LGA 1150
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 i5-4570Best42

Handles basic office and web tasks well, but compilation times and heavy multitasking expose its limits.

Intel Core i5-4590T38

Adequate for basic office tasks where bursty workloads benefit from the 3.0 GHz turbo, but sustained multi-threaded work is limited.

Gaming

Intel Core i5-4570Best48

Competent with older titles and eSports games, but modern AAA titles expose the four-thread limitation severely.

Intel Core i5-4590T30

The 2.0 GHz base clock severely limits gaming performance. Only viable for very old or casual games, even with a dedicated GPU.

Virtualization

Intel Core i5-4570Best25

VT-x and VT-d are present but four threads severely constrain any practical virtualization workload.

Intel Core i5-4590T20

Four threads at low clocks make virtualization impractical for any meaningful workload.

Efficiency

Intel Core i5-457050

84W TDP for this performance level is unremarkable; modern processors deliver 2-3x the performance at similar power.

Intel Core i5-4590TBest72

The 35W TDP was impressive for a quad-core in 2014, though modern processors achieve far better performance at similar or lower power.

Specialized Performance

AI / ML

Intel Core i5-4570Not Supported
  • No AI acceleration hardware
  • AVX2 available but insufficient for meaningful inference
  • DDR3 bandwidth too low for AI workloads
  • Not suitable for any local AI tasks
Intel Core i5-4590TNot Supported
  • No AI acceleration hardware
  • Low clock speeds further reduce any AVX2 compute capability
  • 35W power budget leaves no headroom for inference workloads
  • Not viable for any AI application

Content Creation

Intel Core i5-4570Poor
Photoshop (Basic Edits)Lightroom (Photo Culling)Audacity (Audio Editing)Handbrake (Slow H.264 Encoding)Canva (Web-Based Design)
Intel Core i5-4590TPoor
Photoshop (Basic Edits Only)Lightroom (Photo Browsing)OBS Software Encoding (720p30 Slow Preset)Word Processing and SpreadsheetsWeb-Based Design Tools

Gaming

Intel Core i5-4570Fair
  • Capable with eSports titles like CS:GO and Dota 2
  • Bottlenecks mid-range and above modern GPUs
  • DDR3 memory limits performance in open-world games
  • No Hyper-Threading reduces 1% low frame rates
  • Best paired with GTX 1060 or slower for balanced performance
Intel Core i5-4590TPoor
  • 2.0 GHz base clock too low for consistent game performance
  • 3.0 GHz turbo helps in short bursts but cannot sustain
  • Only suitable for pre-2015 games at low settings
  • HD 4600 insufficient for any modern gaming without a dGPU
  • Even with a dGPU, CPU bottleneck is severe in modern titles

Industry Impact

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

Best CPU by Use Case

Office Productivity
Good
Good
1080p Gaming with dGPU
Fair
Home Media Center
Good
Light Programming
Fair
Video Editing
Poor
Home Theater PC
Good
Digital Signage
Good
Gaming
Poor
Content Creation
Poor

Target Audience

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

Strengths & Weaknesses

Intel Core i5-4570

Pros

  • Was excellent value at launch for mainstream users
  • TSX and TXT support uncommon in this price segment
  • Good turbo boost delta of 400 MHz
  • Wide compatibility with H81 through Z97 chipsets
  • Low used-market pricing makes it viable for repairs

Cons

  • Only 4 threads without Hyper-Threading
  • Locked multiplier eliminates overclocking
  • 84W TDP is inefficient by modern standards
  • DDR3 memory platform is obsolete
  • No longer receives security microcode updates
  • TSX was disabled on most systems due to errata
  • Significantly outperformed by modern i3 processors
Intel Core i5-4590T

Pros

  • Extremely low 35W TDP enables compact cooling solutions
  • Retains full 6 MB L3 cache despite power reduction
  • Quad-core design handles multi-tasking better than dual-core alternatives
  • 1 GHz turbo delta provides good burst performance
  • Compatible with all LGA 1150 motherboards

Cons

  • 2.0 GHz base clock is very slow for sustained workloads
  • Launched at $192, more expensive than the faster i5-4590
  • Only 4 threads without Hyper-Threading
  • Locked multiplier with no overclocking potential
  • DDR3 memory platform is obsolete
  • Outperformed by modern Celeron and Pentium processors at lower TDPs
  • Limited availability as it was primarily an OEM product

Competitors & Alternatives

Intel Core i5-4570

Intel Core i5-4590T

Our Verdict on Each

A solid mid-range performer that was the go-to recommendation for mainstream PC builders in 2013-2014, but its four-thread limitation and DDR3 platform make it impractical for modern workloads.

Best for: Replacing a failed CPU in an existing LGA 1150 system where motherboard reuse is necessary

Read the full review

An impressive engineering exercise in power efficiency that sacrificed significant performance for its 35W TDP. Ideal for thermally constrained builds of its era, but modern low-power CPUs deliver far better performance at similar power envelopes.

Best for: Replacing a failed CPU in an existing thin mini-ITX or all-in-one system that requires a 35W LGA 1150 processor

Read the full review

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Intel Core i5-4570 or Intel Core i5-4590T?

Based on our editorial ratings, the Intel Core i5-4570 comes out ahead with a score of 7.2/10. 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, Intel Core i5-4570 or Intel Core i5-4590T?

For gaming, the Intel Core i5-4570 leads with a gaming performance score of 48/100 among Intel Core i5-4570 and Intel Core i5-4590T.

Which uses less power?

The Intel Core i5-4590T has the lowest rated TDP. Power draw across these chips: Intel Core i5-4570 (84 W), Intel Core i5-4590T (35 W).

Do Intel Core i5-4570 and Intel Core i5-4590T use the same socket?

Yes — all of these CPUs use the LGA 1150 socket, so they share compatible motherboards.

Which is faster in multi-core benchmarks?

The Intel Core i5-4570 posts the highest multi-core benchmark score. Multi-core results: Intel Core i5-4570 (4,310), Intel Core i5-4590T (3,350). Benchmark figures are approximate and workload-dependent.