CPU Comparison

Intel Xeon 6728P vs Intel Xeon 6732P

A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The Intel Xeon 6728P is a 24-core, 48-thread server and workstation processor based on the Granite Rapids-SP platform, offering 144 MB of L3 cache, 8-channel DDR5-6400 memory, and 88 PCIe 5.0 lanes in a 210 W TDP envelope.

Intel · Xeon 6700P Series
Intel Xeon 6728P
24C / 48T4.1 GHz210 W
8.6
Full review
Top pick
Intel · Xeon 6700P Series
Intel Xeon 6732P
32C / 64T4.3 GHz350 W
8.7
Full review

The Bottom Line

Overview & Launch

Brand
Intel
Intel
Market
2S/4S/8S Server and High-End Workstation
2S Server / Workstation
Segment
Server / Workstation
Server / Workstation
Generation
Xeon 6 (Granite Rapids-SP)
6th Gen Xeon Scalable (Granite Rapids-SP)
Launched
2025
2025
Status
Launched
Launched
Codename
Granite Rapids-SP
Granite Rapids-SP
Series
Xeon 6700P Series
Xeon 6700P Series
Family
Intel Xeon 6 (Granite Rapids-SP)
Intel Xeon 6
Predecessor
Intel Xeon Platinum 8260 (24C Cascade Lake-SP)
Intel Xeon Platinum 8461V (Sapphire Rapids-SP)

Specifications Compared

Cores & Clocks
Cores
24
32
Threads
48
64
Base Clock
2.7 GHz
3.8 GHz
Boost Clock
4.1 GHz
4.3 GHz
Cache & Power
L3 Cache
144 MB
144 MB
L2 Cache
64 MB
TDP
210 W
350 W
Architecture
Architecture
Granite Rapids-SP (Redwood Cove P-cores)
Granite Rapids-SP (Redwood Cove P-cores)
Process Node
Intel 3 compute tiles + Intel 7 I/O tiles (commonly marketed as ~3 nm class)
Intel 3
Memory
Memory Type
DDR5
DDR5
Memory Speed
6400 MT/s
6400 MT/s
Memory Channels
Octa (8)
Octa (8)
Max Memory
4096 GB
4096 GB
Platform & I/O
Socket
FCLGA4710
FCLGA4710
PCIe Version
5.0
5.0
PCIe Lanes
88
88
Integrated GPU
None
None
Unlocked
No
No

Performance Compared

Productivity

Intel Xeon 6728P90
Intel Xeon 6732P90

Gaming

Intel Xeon 6728PBest60
Intel Xeon 6732P55

Virtualization

Intel Xeon 6728P93
Intel Xeon 6732PBest94

Efficiency

Intel Xeon 6728P70
Intel Xeon 6732P70

Specialized Performance

AI / ML

Intel Xeon 6728PVery Good
  • Intel AMX accelerates INT8 and BF16 matrix operations for deep learning inference.
  • Good fit for CPU-based LLM inference and small-to-medium model serving.
  • AI performance per core significantly better than pre-AMX Xeon generations.
Intel Xeon 6732PVery Good
  • Intel AMX (BF16/INT8) and AVX-512 accelerate CPU-based inference.
  • Well suited for small to medium LLMs, embedding models, and classic ML.
  • Not a replacement for dedicated accelerators for large-scale training.

Content Creation

Intel Xeon 6728PGood
Blender (CPU mode)V-Ray / Arnold renderingAdobe Premiere Pro / DaVinci Resolve (with GPU)Autodesk Maya / 3ds MaxSimulation and CAE
Intel Xeon 6732PVery Good
Blender (CPU)V-Ray (CPU)DaVinci Resolve (CPU)HandBrakeFFmpeg

Gaming

Intel Xeon 6728PPoor
  • No integrated graphics; discrete GPU required.
  • High platform cost makes it unattractive for gaming versus consumer CPUs.
  • Adequate for casual gaming but not a target use case.
Intel Xeon 6732PLimited
  • No integrated graphics; requires discrete GPU.
  • High single-thread clocks help some game servers, but platform is not optimized for gaming.
  • GPU-bound game servers may still run well depending on title and configuration.

Industry Impact

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

Best CPU by Use Case

AI Inference / Small LLM Hosting
Excellent
Virtualization and VDI
Excellent
In-Memory Databases (e.g., SAP HANA)
Excellent
Enterprise Application Servers
Very Good
High-End Workstation (CAD/CAE/Rendering)
Good
Virtualization & VM Consolidation
Excellent
OLTP / OLAP Databases
Excellent
AI Inference (CPU-side)
Very Good
In-Memory Analytics
Very Good
General-Purpose Enterprise Apps
Good

Target Audience

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

Strengths & Weaknesses

Intel Xeon 6728P

Pros

  • 24 high-performance Redwood Cove P-cores with strong IPC.
  • 144 MB L3 cache benefits latency-sensitive workloads.
  • 8-channel DDR5-6400 with up to 4 TB per socket.
  • 88 PCIe 5.0 lanes for GPUs, NVMe, and networking.
  • AMX and on-die accelerators (QAT, DLB, DSA, IAA) for AI and data processing.
  • Supports 2S/4S/8S configurations for scalable enterprise deployments.

Cons

  • High platform cost and 210 W TDP require robust cooling and power delivery.
  • Locked multiplier; no overclocking headroom.
  • No integrated graphics; must pair with discrete GPU or BMC.
  • Memory and motherboard ecosystem are more expensive than consumer platforms.
  • Less core-count density than higher-end Granite Rapids or EPYC 9004 SKUs.
Intel Xeon 6732P

Pros

  • 32 high-frequency P-cores with strong per-core performance.
  • 8-channel DDR5-6400 with MRDIMM support for high bandwidth.
  • 144 MB L3 cache per socket improves working-set performance.
  • Intel AMX and AVX-512 accelerate AI and HPC on CPU.
  • 88 PCIe 5.0 lanes for flexible I/O in dual-socket servers.
  • Mature RAS and security features (TDX, SGX, total memory encryption).

Cons

  • 350 W TDP requires robust cooling and raises power costs.
  • Dual-socket NUMA topology needs OS and application tuning.
  • Higher platform cost compared to previous-gen Xeons.
  • No integrated graphics; not suitable for headless or light graphics workloads.
  • Core count lags higher-tier SKUs like 6740P/6760P for highly parallel tasks.

Competitors & Alternatives

Intel Xeon 6728P

  • AMD EPYC 9224 (24C/48T, Zen 4, SP5)

    Server / Workstation

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon 6521P (24C/48T, Granite Rapids-SP)

    Server / Workstation

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon 6731P (32C/64T, Granite Rapids-SP)

    Server / Workstation

    Rival
  • AMD EPYC 9124 (16C/32T, Zen 4, SP5)

    Server / Workstation

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon Platinum 8380 (40C/80T, Ice Lake-SP)

    Server / Workstation

    Rival
  • Same 24C/48T Granite Rapids-SP family but lower TDP and price if you don’t need the full 210 W performance profile.

    Compare head-to-head
  • AMD EPYC 9224
    Alt

    24-core Zen 4 server CPU with 12-channel DDR5 and competitive performance; better if you prioritize core count or prefer AMD’s platform.

  • Higher 32C/64T count within the same Granite Rapids-SP platform if you need more threads and can afford the higher TDP.

    Compare head-to-head
  • AMD EPYC 9124
    Alt

    Lower-cost 16-core Zen 4 server CPU if your workload doesn’t require 24 cores and you want to reduce platform cost.

  • Intel Xeon Platinum 8260 (used)
    Alt

    Older 24-core Cascade Lake-SP part available on the used market at lower cost if you don’t need DDR5, PCIe 5.0, or AMX.

Intel Xeon 6732P

Our Verdict on Each

Intel Xeon 6728PRecommended

A balanced Granite Rapids-SP SKU with strong per-core performance, large cache, and serious AI acceleration, best suited for memory-intensive and AI-augmented server workloads rather than cost-sensitive or purely throughput-oriented deployments.

Best for: Building or upgrading a 2S/4S server or workstation for AI inference, in-memory databases, or virtualization where 8-channel DDR5 and AMX are valuable.

Read the full review
Intel Xeon 6732PRecommended

A strong 32-core server CPU with excellent memory bandwidth and built-in AI acceleration, best suited for dual-socket enterprise and AI inference platforms where per-core performance matters more than raw core count.

Best for: Dual-socket enterprise servers running virtualization, databases, or CPU-based AI inference where per-core performance and memory bandwidth are critical.

Read the full review

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Intel Xeon 6728P or Intel Xeon 6732P?

Based on our editorial ratings, the Intel Xeon 6732P comes out ahead with a score of 8.7/10. 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 6728P or Intel Xeon 6732P?

For gaming, the Intel Xeon 6728P leads with a gaming performance score of 60/100 among Intel Xeon 6728P and Intel Xeon 6732P.

Which uses less power?

The Intel Xeon 6728P has the lowest rated TDP. Power draw across these chips: Intel Xeon 6728P (210 W), Intel Xeon 6732P (350 W).

Do Intel Xeon 6728P and Intel Xeon 6732P use the same socket?

Yes — all of these CPUs use the FCLGA4710 socket, so they share compatible motherboards.

Which has more cores?

The Intel Xeon 6732P has the most cores. Core counts: Intel Xeon 6728P (24 cores), Intel Xeon 6732P (32 cores).

Which is faster in multi-core benchmarks?

The Intel Xeon 6732P posts the highest multi-core benchmark score. Multi-core results: Intel Xeon 6728P (0), Intel Xeon 6732P (74,849). Benchmark figures are approximate and workload-dependent.