CPU Comparison
Intel Xeon 6533P-B vs Intel Xeon 6544P-B
A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The Intel Xeon 6533P-B is a 32-core, 64-thread server SoC from the Xeon 6 Granite Rapids-D family, designed for single-socket edge and rack servers that require high core density, integrated accelerators, and DDR5-5600 memory within a 205 W TDP envelope.
The Bottom Line
Overview & Launch
Specifications Compared
Performance Compared
Productivity
Gaming
Virtualization
Efficiency
Specialized Performance
AI / ML
- Intel AMX provides significant speedups for int8/bf16 inference and training on CPU.
- No dedicated high-bandwidth AI accelerator like a GPU, but strong for CPU-based AI workloads.
- Best used as a host CPU with attached GPUs or accelerators.
- AMX and DL Boost accelerate CPU-based inference
- Suitable for small to medium LLM serving and vision models at the edge
- No GPU-style high-throughput training
Content Creation
Gaming
- No integrated graphics; requires discrete GPU.
- Optimized for server workloads, not game workloads.
- Cost and power are far above consumer gaming CPUs.
- No integrated graphics
- Server-focused SoC not validated for gaming
- Gaming not a target use case
Industry Impact
Best CPU by Use Case
Target Audience
Strengths & Weaknesses
Pros
- 32 cores and 64 threads in a single socket
- 48 PCIe 5/4 lanes for NVMe, GPUs and SmartNICs
- DDR5-5600 with ECC and up to 1.13 TB memory
- Intel AMX for AI inference and training on CPU
- Integrated QAT and crypto accelerators
- BGA package enables dense, embedded server designs
Cons
- 1S-only; no dual-socket upgrade path
- 205 W TDP is high for some edge environments
- BGA soldered CPU; no socketed upgrades
- Platform cost is high for small deployments
- No integrated graphics; not suitable as a client/workstation CPU
Pros
- 32 high-performance Redwood Cove P-cores with strong per-thread throughput
- Integrated QAT, DLB, DSA, and media transcode accelerators for vRAN and media
- 48 PCIe 5.0/4.0 lanes for high-speed NICs and accelerators
- Quad-channel DDR5-5600 with ECC and up to 1.13 TB capacity
- Single-socket SoC design reduces platform complexity for edge systems
Cons
- No dual-socket support; limited to 1S platforms
- No integrated graphics; GPU or display outputs require a discrete card
- 170 W TDP can still be challenging in tightly sealed edge enclosures
- L2 cache and per-core cache breakdown not fully documented by Intel
- New platform with limited independent benchmark data
Competitors & Alternatives
Intel Xeon 6533P-B
- AMD EPYC 9334 (32-core, Genoa)Rival
Server
- AMD EPYC 9354P (32-core, single-socket SP5)Rival
Server
- Intel Xeon 6543P-B (32-core, lower-TDP Granite Rapids-D sibling)Rival
Server / Edge SoC
- Intel Xeon 6736P (36-core Granite Rapids-SP, FCLGA4710)Rival
Server
- Intel Xeon Gold 6538N (32-core, Sapphire Rapids era)Rival
Server
- AMD EPYC 9334Alt
Similar 32-core count with higher base clock and 12 memory channels if you need more memory bandwidth and can accept higher platform cost.
Same Granite Rapids-D family but lower 160 W TDP and slightly lower clocks, better if power efficiency is more important than peak frequency.
Compare head-to-headSocketed LGA4710 alternative with more memory channels and dual-socket support if you need a more traditional server platform.
Compare head-to-head- AMD EPYC 8004 SienaAlt
Competing edge-focused EPYC with different trade-offs in I/O and TDP, depending on your networking and power constraints.
- Intel Xeon D-28xx/Near-edge family (older)Alt
Much lower power and cost if you do not need 32 cores or PCIe 5, and can accept older DDR4/PCIe 3 platforms.
Intel Xeon 6544P-B
- AMD EPYC 7543 (32-core Milan)Rival
Server / General Purpose
- AMD EPYC 9355P (32-core Turin)Rival
Server / AI / HPC
- Compare head-to-headIntel Xeon 6543P-BRival
Server / Edge
- Compare head-to-headIntel Xeon 6706P-BRival
Server / Edge
- Intel Xeon Gold 6526Y (Emerald Rapids)Rival
Server / General Purpose
- AMD EPYC 7543Alt
32-core Milan alternative with 256 MB L3 and 8-channel DDR4, offering higher memory bandwidth and cache for workloads that can leverage it, at higher platform power.
- AMD EPYC 9355PAlt
32-core Turin processor with higher clocks and modern DDR5/PCIe 5, suitable if you want a modern AMD-based alternative with strong AI performance.
- Intel Xeon Gold 6526YAlt
Mainstream server CPU with similar core count but different feature set; useful if you don’t need the SoC-style accelerators and want a more traditional platform.
Our Verdict on Each
A high-density, single-socket server SoC with strong core counts, modern I/O, and built-in accelerators for AI, crypto and QAT, best suited for edge and rack nodes where you want one big CPU instead of two smaller ones.
Best for: Building a dense, single-socket edge or rack server where you want many cores, DDR5, and PCIe 5 without the complexity of a dual-socket platform.
Read the full reviewA highly integrated edge and network SoC with strong per-core performance, built-in accelerators, and modern I/O, though its value depends heavily on how much you exploit its specialized features rather than raw core count alone.
Best for: Building a single-socket edge or network appliance where you can exploit the integrated accelerators and high PCIe lane count, such as vRAN, secure gateways, or media edge servers.
Read the full reviewFrequently Asked Questions
Which is better, Intel Xeon 6533P-B or Intel Xeon 6544P-B?
Based on our editorial ratings, the Intel Xeon 6544P-B 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 Xeon 6533P-B or Intel Xeon 6544P-B?
For gaming, the Intel Xeon 6533P-B leads with a gaming performance score of 20/100 among Intel Xeon 6533P-B and Intel Xeon 6544P-B.
Which uses less power?
The Intel Xeon 6544P-B has the lowest rated TDP. Power draw across these chips: Intel Xeon 6533P-B (205 W), Intel Xeon 6544P-B (170 W).
Do Intel Xeon 6533P-B and Intel Xeon 6544P-B use the same socket?
No. They use different sockets (Intel Xeon 6533P-B: FCBGA4368, Intel Xeon 6544P-B: LGA4710 / FCBGA4368), so each needs a compatible motherboard.