CPU Comparison

Intel Core i9-12900TE vs Intel Core i9-13900TE

A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The Intel Core i9-12900TE is a highly specialized embedded variant of Intel's 12th Generation Alder Lake flagship, combining the full 16-core hybrid die (8 Performance cores and 8 Efficient cores for 24 total threads) with an exceptionally low 35-watt base power rating. Launched on January 4, 2022, alongside the broader Alder Lake desktop lineup, this processor is engineered specifically for thermally constrained environments such as industrial PCs, edge computing gateways, digital signage controllers, and compact embedded systems where sustained high power delivery is impossible. Unlike the consumer-facing i9-12900 or i9-12900K, the TE model slashes the P-core base frequency to just 1.1 GHz and the E-core base to 1.0 GHz to remain within its stringent thermal envelope. However, it retains the ability to boost up to 4.8 GHz on a single P-core, meaning burst performance remains competitive with much higher-wattage parts. It also carries Intel's embedded lifecycle commitment, guaranteeing long-term availability and stability for mission-critical deployments. With support for both DDR4-3200 and DDR5-4800 memory, 20 PCIe 5.0 lanes directly from the CPU, and Intel UHD Graphics 770, the i9-12900TE delivers an unusually broad feature set for a 35-watt processor, making it one of the most capable low-power desktop CPUs Intel has ever produced for the embedded market.

Intel · Core i9
Intel Core i9-12900TE
16C / 24T4.8 GHz35 W
7.8
Full review
Top pick
Intel · 13th Generation Intel Core i9 Processors
Intel Core i9-13900TE
24C / 32T5 GHz35 W
8.4
Full review

The Bottom Line

Overview & Launch

Brand
Intel
Intel
Market
Embedded Desktop
Embedded
Segment
Embedded Low-Power Desktop
Generation
12th Gen (Alder Lake-S)
13th Generation Intel Core i9
Launched
2022
2023
Status
Active
Launched
Codename
Alder Lake-S
Raptor Lake
Series
Core i9
13th Generation Intel Core i9 Processors
Family
Alder Lake-S
13th Generation Intel Core i9 Processors
Predecessor
Intel Core i9-11900TE
Intel Core i9-12900TE (Alder Lake, 16C/24T, 35 W, Q1'22)
Successor
Intel Core i9-13900TE
Intel Core i9-14900T (Raptor Lake Refresh, 24C/32T, 35 W desktop, 2024)

Specifications Compared

Cores & Clocks
Cores
16
24
Threads
24
32
Base Clock
1.1 GHz
1 GHz
Boost Clock
4.8 GHz
5 GHz
Cache & Power
L3 Cache
30 MB
36 MB
TDP
35 W
35 W
Architecture
Architecture
Alder Lake-S (Hybrid: Golden Cove + Gracemont)
Raptor Lake (Performance Hybrid: 8x Raptor Cove P‑cores + 16x Gracemont E‑cores)
Process Node
Intel 7 (10 nm Enhanced SuperFin)
Intel 7 (10 nm Enhanced SuperFin / Intel 7)
Memory
Memory Type
DDR4 / DDR5
DDR5, DDR4
Memory Speed
DDR4-3200 / DDR5-4800
Up to DDR5‑5600, DDR4‑3200
Memory Channels
Dual (2)
Dual (2)
Max Memory
128 GB
128 GB
Platform & I/O
Socket
LGA 1700
FCLGA1700
PCIe Version
PCIe 5.0
PCIe 5.0 and 4.0
PCIe Lanes
20
20
Integrated GPU
Yes
Yes
Unlocked
Yes
No

Performance Compared

Productivity

Intel Core i9-12900TE78
Intel Core i9-13900TEBest85

Gaming

Intel Core i9-12900TEBest72
Intel Core i9-13900TE60

Virtualization

Intel Core i9-12900TE80
Intel Core i9-13900TEBest88

Efficiency

Intel Core i9-12900TEBest92
Intel Core i9-13900TE90

Specialized Performance

AI / ML

Intel Core i9-12900TELimited
  • No dedicated NPU or AI acceleration hardware
  • CPU-based inference is possible but constrained by the 35W power limit
  • UHD Graphics 770 provides minimal OpenVINO acceleration for lightweight models
  • Not recommended for training or large-scale inference workloads
  • Suitable only for edge AI inference on small models with low latency requirements
Intel Core i9-13900TEModerate
  • Intel Deep Learning Boost (AVX2 VNNI) and GNA 3.0 help with small to medium AI inference workloads.
  • No dedicated high‑throughput AI accelerator; best suited for edge inference rather than training.
  • Good for vision and audio models at batch size 1–4, but not a replacement for a dedicated AI accelerator.

Content Creation

Intel Core i9-12900TEGood
Adobe Photoshop (burst editing)Adobe Premiere Pro (light 4K proxy editing)DaVinci Resolve (1080p grading)Blender (short render bursts)HandBrake (occasional transcoding)
Intel Core i9-13900TEGood
Adobe Premiere Pro (encode/decode via Quick Sync)DaVinci Resolve (light to moderate projects)Blender (CPU rendering)Cinema 4D (viewport and CPU rendering)HandBrake (transcoding)

Gaming

Intel Core i9-12900TEModerate
  • Single-core boost of 4.8 GHz delivers competitive frame rates in short gaming sessions
  • Sustained CPU-heavy gaming scenarios cause thermal throttling under the 35W envelope
  • UHD Graphics 770 is sufficient for lightweight or older titles only
  • A discrete GPU is recommended for any serious gaming workload
  • Power-limited PL1 significantly reduces performance in long-duration gameplay compared to 65W+ variants
Intel Core i9-13900TELimited
  • Low base and long‑duration power limit constrains sustained GPU feed and clock headroom.
  • Fine for light or retro gaming and GPU‑compute workloads, but not competitive with desktop K‑series or high‑TDP mobile CPUs.
  • Integrated UHD 770 is sufficient for display out and basic 3D, not for serious gaming.

Industry Impact

Gaming
Negligible
Low
Workstations
Moderate
Moderate
Content Creation
Low
Moderate
Virtualization
High
High

Best CPU by Use Case

Industrial Automation Controllers
Excellent
Edge Computing & IoT Gateways
Excellent
Digital Signage & Kiosk Systems
Excellent
Compact Embedded Workstations
Very Good
Network Appliance / Firewall
Very Good
Medical Imaging Terminals
Good
Light 3D Rendering
Moderate
Edge Server / Micro Data Center
Excellent
Industrial Automation Controller
Excellent
Network & Security Appliance
Very Good
Digital Signage & Kiosk Controller
Very Good
General Office / Embedded PC
Good

Target Audience

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

Strengths & Weaknesses

Intel Core i9-12900TE

Pros

  • Full 16-core i9 die at only 35W base power
  • 4.8 GHz single-core boost remains competitive with mainstream CPUs
  • Intel embedded lifecycle guarantee for long-term availability
  • Dual DDR4/DDR5 memory support offers design flexibility
  • 20 PCIe 5.0 CPU lanes for high-bandwidth peripherals
  • Outstanding performance-per-watt for always-on systems
  • Hybrid architecture excels at mixed workload types
  • UHD Graphics 770 included for headless or display-driven embedded scenarios

Cons

  • Very low base clocks (1.1 GHz P-core / 1.0 GHz E-core) limit sustained performance
  • 35W TDP severely constrains prolonged multi-core workloads
  • Higher price than consumer i9-12900 due to embedded market premium
  • Not intended or priced for standard desktop use
  • Thermal throttling kicks in quickly under sustained all-core loads
  • ECC memory not natively supported on this model
  • Integrated graphics are too weak for GPU-accelerated workloads
Intel Core i9-13900TE

Pros

  • 24 cores / 32 threads in a 35 W embedded package.
  • Intel 7 Raptor Lake hybrid architecture with strong multi‑thread efficiency.
  • DDR5 and DDR4 support for flexible platform design.
  • 20 PCIe 5.0/4.0 lanes for modern high‑speed I/O.
  • Full vPro Enterprise feature set (AMT, TDT, SIPP, etc.).
  • Integrated UHD Graphics 770 with Quick Sync for media and remote management.

Cons

  • Locked multiplier and low base clock limit overclocking and peak gaming performance.
  • Integrated graphics are not suitable for serious gaming or heavy GPU compute.
  • 35 W TDP caps long‑duration turbo compared to higher‑power desktop SKUs.
  • Embedded SKUs may carry a price premium over consumer equivalents.
  • Newer 14th Gen Raptor Lake Refresh parts offer higher clocks and better efficiency.

Competitors & Alternatives

Intel Core i9-12900TE

  • AMD Ryzen 9 5900T

    Embedded Low-Power Desktop

    Rival
  • AMD Ryzen 7 5800U (Embedded)

    Embedded Low-Power

    Rival
  • Intel Core i9-11900TE

    Embedded Low-Power Desktop

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon E-2388G

    Entry Workstation / Embedded

    Rival
  • AMD Ryzen 9 PRO 6950 (Embedded)

    Embedded Low-Power Desktop

    Rival
  • Same die at 35W but slightly higher base/boost clocks and consumer pricing, if embedded lifecycle is not required.

    Compare head-to-head
  • Intel Core i7-12700TE
    Alt

    Fewer cores (12) but same 35W TDP with lower embedded pricing, ideal if 16 cores are overkill for the workload.

  • Direct successor with more E-cores (16 vs 8), higher boost clocks, and larger L3 cache at the same 35W TDP.

    Compare head-to-head
  • AMD Ryzen 9 7900
    Alt

    12 Zen 4 cores at 65W TDP with much higher IPC and DDR5-only support, better for slightly less power-constrained embedded builds.

  • Intel Core i5-12600TE
    Alt

    6P+4E hybrid at 35W for significantly lower cost when the full i9 core count is unnecessary.

Intel Core i9-13900TE

Our Verdict on Each

The i9-12900TE packs the full Alder Lake i9 die into a 35W envelope, offering exceptional burst performance for embedded and low-power systems, though sustained multi-core workloads are inevitably constrained by its strict power ceiling.

Best for: The i9-12900TE is an ideal choice for system integrators building embedded or industrial systems that require maximum computational density within a strict 35-watt power budget. If your deployment involves compact fanless enclosures, edge computing nodes, or digital signage controllers that need burst computational headroom alongside all-day efficiency, this processor delivers an unmatched combination of core count and power discipline. The dual DDR4/DDR5 memory support also provides flexibility during platform design. However, for consumer desktop builds — even small-form-factor ones — the standard i9-12900 or i9-12900T offers better sustained performance at a lower price point, since the TE's embedded premium and lower base clocks provide no advantage in typical desktop use.

Read the full review

A very capable embedded SoC that brings desktop-class 24-core Raptor Lake performance into a strict 35 W envelope, with strong vPro manageability and long lifecycle, but not aimed at gaming or consumer workloads.

Best for: New embedded or edge designs requiring high core counts, vPro manageability, and a long platform lifecycle within a 35 W power budget.

Read the full review

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Intel Core i9-12900TE or Intel Core i9-13900TE?

Based on our editorial ratings, the Intel Core i9-13900TE comes out ahead with a score of 8.4/10. 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 i9-12900TE or Intel Core i9-13900TE?

For gaming, the Intel Core i9-12900TE leads with a gaming performance score of 72/100 among Intel Core i9-12900TE and Intel Core i9-13900TE.

Do Intel Core i9-12900TE and Intel Core i9-13900TE use the same socket?

No. They use different sockets (Intel Core i9-12900TE: LGA 1700, Intel Core i9-13900TE: FCLGA1700), so each needs a compatible motherboard.

Which has more cores?

The Intel Core i9-13900TE has the most cores. Core counts: Intel Core i9-12900TE (16 cores), Intel Core i9-13900TE (24 cores).

Which is faster in multi-core benchmarks?

The Intel Core i9-12900TE posts the highest multi-core benchmark score. Multi-core results: Intel Core i9-12900TE (22,600). Benchmark figures are approximate and workload-dependent.