CPU Comparison

Intel Xeon 6548P-B vs Intel Xeon 6736P

A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The Intel Xeon 6548P-B is a 32-core, 64-thread server processor based on the Granite Rapids-D architecture and Intel 3 process, aimed at single-socket data center, edge, and workstation platforms requiring strong AI and accelerator features alongside quad-channel DDR5-6400 and 48 PCIe Gen4/Gen5 lanes.

Intel · Xeon 6 6500P Series
Intel Xeon 6548P-B
32C / 64T3.5 GHz195 W
8.2
Full review
Top pick
Intel · Xeon 6
Intel Xeon 6736P
36C / 72T4.1 GHz205 W
8.8
Full review

The Bottom Line

Overview & Launch

Brand
Intel
Intel
Market
Server / Workstation
Server / Enterprise
Segment
Server / Workstation
Server / Workstation
Generation
Xeon 6 (Granite Rapids-SP / Granite Rapids-D)
6th Gen Xeon Scalable (Granite Rapids-SP)
Launched
2025
2025
Status
Launched
Launched
Codename
Granite Rapids-D
Granite Rapids-SP
Series
Xeon 6 6500P Series
Xeon 6
Family
Intel Xeon 6
Intel Xeon
Predecessor
Intel Xeon Gold 6530 (Emerald Rapids‑SP)
Intel Xeon Gold 6430 / similar 32–36 core Sapphire Rapids SKUs
Successor
Not yet announced
Next-generation Xeon platform (not yet announced at time of writing)

Specifications Compared

Cores & Clocks
Cores
32
36
Threads
64
72
Base Clock
2 GHz
2 GHz
Boost Clock
3.5 GHz
4.1 GHz
Cache & Power
L3 Cache
128 MB
144 MB
TDP
195 W
205 W
Architecture
Architecture
Granite Rapids-D (Redwood Cove P‑cores)
Granite Rapids-SP (P-cores only)
Process Node
Intel 3
Intel 3 (~3nm-class)
Memory
Memory Type
DDR5
DDR5
Memory Speed
DDR5-6400
DDR5-6400
Memory Channels
Quad (4)
Octa (8)
Max Memory
1130 GB
4096 GB
Platform & I/O
Socket
LGA 4710
FCLGA4710
PCIe Version
PCIe 5.0 / PCIe 4.0
PCIe 5.0
PCIe Lanes
48
88
Integrated GPU
None
None
Unlocked
No
No

Performance Compared

Productivity

Intel Xeon 6548P-B
Intel Xeon 6736P88

Gaming

Intel Xeon 6548P-B
Intel Xeon 6736P30

Virtualization

Intel Xeon 6548P-B
Intel Xeon 6736P92

Efficiency

Intel Xeon 6548P-B
Intel Xeon 6736P78

Specialized Performance

AI / ML

Intel Xeon 6548P-BVery Good (for CPU‑based AI)
  • Intel AMX on every P‑core for BF16/FP16/int8 inference
  • AVX‑512 with 2x512‑bit FMA units
  • Well‑suited as a host CPU for GPU‑accelerated AI systems
  • Not a replacement for dedicated AI accelerators
Intel Xeon 6736PGood (for CPU-based inference)
  • AMX and DL Boost accelerate matrix operations for inference.
  • Best suited for CPU-hosted inference models or pre-/post-processing alongside discrete accelerators.
  • Not a replacement for high-end GPUs or specialized AI accelerators for training.

Content Creation

Intel Xeon 6548P-BGood (for server‑side workflows)
Server‑side video transcodingBatch rendering and simulationData analytics and ETLSoftware builds and CI
Intel Xeon 6736PGood (for server-adjacent workloads)
Blender (CPU rendering)V-Ray / Corona CPU renderingHandBrake encodingFFmpeg software encodingDaVinci Resolve (CPU mode)

Gaming

Intel Xeon 6548P-BNot applicable
  • Server CPU not targeted at gaming
  • No official or community gaming benchmarks available
  • Single‑threaded performance is modest versus client CPUs
Intel Xeon 6736PNot Recommended
  • No integrated graphics; requires discrete GPU.
  • Platform optimized for server workloads, not client gaming.
  • Latency and driver stack not tuned for gaming.
  • Single-thread performance is good, but not competitive with best gaming CPUs.

Industry Impact

Gaming
Low
Low
Workstations
Moderate
Moderate
Content Creation
Low (indirect via server‑side processing)
Moderate
Virtualization
High
High

Best CPU by Use Case

AI Inference & Small LLM Hosting
Very Good
Virtualized Cloud & VDI
Very Good
Network & Edge / vRAN
Excellent
Database & Analytics
Very Good
Single‑Socket Workstation
Good
Virtualization / VDI
Excellent
Database Servers (OLTP / OLAP)
Excellent
In-Memory Analytics
Excellent
AI Inference (CPU + AMX)
Very Good
General Enterprise Applications
Excellent

Target Audience

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

Strengths & Weaknesses

Intel Xeon 6548P-B

Pros

  • 32 P‑cores with AMX and AVX‑512 for AI and HPC
  • Integrated QAT, DLB and vRAN Boost accelerators
  • 48 PCIe Gen4/Gen5 lanes in a 1S platform
  • Quad‑channel DDR5‑6400 with ECC and TME
  • Modern Intel 3 process and Granite Rapids architecture
  • Good fit for AI inference, virtualization and network/edge workloads

Cons

  • 195 W TDP requires robust cooling
  • 1S‑only, no dual‑socket upgrade path
  • No integrated graphics
  • Limited public benchmark data as of mid‑2026
  • Higher platform cost than older Xeon Gold generations
Intel Xeon 6736P

Pros

  • 36 high-efficiency P-cores with 72 threads for dense server workloads.
  • 8-channel DDR5-6400 with up to 4 TB per socket and high bandwidth.
  • 88 PCIe 5.0 lanes for GPUs, NVMe, and SmartNICs.
  • Integrated accelerators (AMX, QAT, DLB, DSA, IAA) for AI, crypto, and data processing.
  • Granular SST-PP and SST-BF tuning for per-core clock and TDP optimization.
  • Strong security feature set including TDX, SGX, and MK-TME for confidential computing.

Cons

  • No integrated graphics; requires discrete GPU for any display output.
  • Not optimized for gaming or client workloads.
  • Platform is server-only; LGA4710 motherboards are not desktop boards.
  • Higher platform cost compared to older Sapphire Rapids systems.
  • Core count is modest versus top Granite Rapids-SP SKUs that reach 86+ cores.

Competitors & Alternatives

Intel Xeon 6548P-B

  • AMD EPYC 9354

    Server / AI

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon Gold 6530

    Server

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon Gold 6538N

    Server

    Rival
  • AMD EPYC 8434PN

    Server / Cloud

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon 6518P-B

    Server / 1S

    Rival
  • AMD EPYC 8024P
    Alt

    8‑core low‑power SP6 CPU for edge and cloud where fewer cores and lower TDP are preferred.

  • Intel Xeon 6700P Series SKUs
    Alt

    Higher‑core‑count Granite Rapids‑SP parts for dual‑socket or more demanding multi‑workload servers.

Intel Xeon 6736P

Our Verdict on Each

A modern 32‑core Xeon 6 P‑core CPU that brings meaningful AI, crypto and networking acceleration to the mainstream single‑socket server space, though its 195 W TDP and 1S‑only design limit appeal to dual‑socket or low‑power deployments.

Best for: Single‑socket server or workstation needing strong AI and network acceleration with quad‑channel DDR5 and many PCIe Gen5 lanes

Read the full review
Intel Xeon 6736PRecommended

A balanced Granite Rapids-SP SKU that pairs 36 P-cores with strong I/O and accelerators, ideal for consolidating older 2S clusters or building new general-purpose + AI inference nodes.

Best for: New or refreshed dual-socket servers for virtualization, databases, and mixed enterprise + AI inference workloads where you want strong per-core performance, high memory bandwidth, and integrated accelerators without moving to the highest core-count SKUs.

Read the full review

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Intel Xeon 6548P-B or Intel Xeon 6736P?

Based on our editorial ratings, the Intel Xeon 6736P comes out ahead with a score of 8.8/10. 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 Xeon 6548P-B or Intel Xeon 6736P?

For gaming, the Intel Xeon 6736P leads with a gaming performance score of 30/100 among Intel Xeon 6548P-B and Intel Xeon 6736P.

Which uses less power?

The Intel Xeon 6548P-B has the lowest rated TDP. Power draw across these chips: Intel Xeon 6548P-B (195 W), Intel Xeon 6736P (205 W).

Do Intel Xeon 6548P-B and Intel Xeon 6736P use the same socket?

No. They use different sockets (Intel Xeon 6548P-B: LGA 4710, Intel Xeon 6736P: FCLGA4710), so each needs a compatible motherboard.

Which has more cores?

The Intel Xeon 6736P has the most cores. Core counts: Intel Xeon 6548P-B (32 cores), Intel Xeon 6736P (36 cores).

Which is faster in multi-core benchmarks?

The Intel Xeon 6736P posts the highest multi-core benchmark score. Multi-core results: Intel Xeon 6736P (44,000). Benchmark figures are approximate and workload-dependent.