CPU Comparison

Intel Xeon 6747P vs Intel Xeon 6761P

A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The Intel Xeon 6747P is a 48-core, 96-thread server processor in the Xeon 6 6700P series (Granite Rapids-SP) built on the Intel 3 process with 288 MB of L3 cache, DDR5/MRDIMM support, 88 PCIe 5.0 lanes, and a 330 W base TDP, designed for dual-socket data center and HPC workloads.

Top pick
Intel · Xeon 6
Intel Xeon 6747P
48C / 96T3.9 GHz330 W
9
Full review
Intel · Xeon 6
Intel Xeon 6761P
64C / 128T3.9 GHz350 W
8.7
Full review

The Bottom Line

Overview & Launch

Brand
Intel
Intel
Market
Server / Data Center / HPC
1S Server / Workstation
Segment
Server / Data Center
Server / Workstation
Generation
Xeon 6 6700P (Granite Rapids-SP)
6th Gen Xeon Scalable (Xeon 6 with P-Cores)
Launched
2025
2025
Status
Launched
Launched
Codename
Granite Rapids-SP (Xeon 6 6700P)
Granite Rapids-SP
Series
Xeon 6
Xeon 6
Family
Xeon 6 6700P (Granite Rapids-SP)
Intel Xeon
Predecessor
Intel Xeon Scalable (4th/5th Gen, Emerald Rapids‑SP)
Intel Xeon Platinum 8470‑class (Sapphire Rapids)

Specifications Compared

Cores & Clocks
Cores
48
64
Threads
96
128
Base Clock
2.7 GHz
2.5 GHz
Boost Clock
3.9 GHz
3.9 GHz
Cache & Power
L3 Cache
288 MB
336 MB
TDP
330 W
350 W
Architecture
Architecture
Granite Rapids-SP (Xeon 6 6700P)
Granite Rapids-SP (Redwood Cove P‑cores)
Process Node
Intel 3
Intel 3
Memory
Memory Type
DDR5 / MRDIMM
DDR5 / MRDIMM
Memory Speed
DDR5‑6400 MT/s (MRDIMM‑8800 MT/s; up to 8000 MT/s effective)
DDR5‑6400; MRDIMM‑8000
Memory Channels
Octa (8)
Octa (8)
Max Memory
4096 GB
4096 GB
Platform & I/O
Socket
FCLGA4710
FCLGA4710
PCIe Version
PCIe 5.0
PCIe 5.0
PCIe Lanes
88
136
Integrated GPU
None
None
Unlocked
No
No

Performance Compared

Productivity

Intel Xeon 6747P
Intel Xeon 6761P94

Gaming

Intel Xeon 6747P
Intel Xeon 6761P40

Virtualization

Intel Xeon 6747P
Intel Xeon 6761P96

Efficiency

Intel Xeon 6747P
Intel Xeon 6761P70

Specialized Performance

AI / ML

Intel Xeon 6747PVery Good (CPU‑side)
  • Intel AMX and DL Boost accelerate matrix and inference workloads on‑CPU
  • No discrete GPU on the CPU; large AI training workloads typically require add‑in accelerators
  • Well‑suited for inference at scale in data centers with CPU‑first deployments
Intel Xeon 6761PVery Good
  • Intel AMX accelerates matrix operations for inference and low‑precision training
  • DL Boost (AVX‑512 VNNI) improves INT8 inference throughput
  • Best suited for CPU‑based AI or as a host for discrete accelerators, not as a replacement for GPUs in large‑scale training

Content Creation

Intel Xeon 6747PLimited relevance
Offline rendering (CPU)Compiling large codebasesScientific simulationsVideo encoding with CPU acceleration
Intel Xeon 6761PVery Good
Blender (CPU rendering)V‑Ray / Arnold renderingFFmpeg / video transcodingLarge‑scale data prep for ML pipelinesScientific visualization

Gaming

Intel Xeon 6747PNot applicable
  • No integrated graphics
  • Socket and platform are server/workstation oriented, not desktop gaming
  • Single‑thread clocks are lower than typical gaming CPUs; latency matters more for servers
Intel Xeon 6761PNot Recommended
  • Not designed or marketed for gaming
  • Few games scale beyond 16–24 threads
  • Platform cost and power are disproportionate for gaming

Industry Impact

Gaming
None
None
Workstations
High
High
Content Creation
Moderate (indirect, via professional workstations)
Moderate
Virtualization
High
Very High

Best CPU by Use Case

Enterprise databases and analytics
Excellent
Virtualization (VMs and containers)
Excellent
CPU‑side AI inference (AMX + DL Boost)
Very Good
High‑performance computing (HPC)
Very Good
Gaming
Not recommended
Virtualization / VDI
Excellent
In‑Memory Databases
Excellent
AI Inference & Fine‑Tuning
Very Good
HPC Front‑End & Cluster Nodes
Very Good
General Purpose Server
Good

Target Audience

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

Strengths & Weaknesses

Intel Xeon 6747P

Pros

  • 48 cores and 96 threads for high multi‑threaded throughput
  • Large 288 MB L3 cache and Intel 3 manufacturing
  • Eight‑channel DDR5/MRDIMM support with up to 4 TB per socket
  • 88 PCIe 5.0 lanes per socket for modern NVMe and NICs
  • Intel AMX and DL Boost for CPU‑side AI inference
  • DSA/DLB/IAA/QAT accelerators for storage, networking, and analytics
  • Dual‑socket UPI interconnect (24 GT/s, 4 links)
  • Intel TDX and TME for confidential computing and memory encryption

Cons

  • 330 W TDP requires robust power and cooling in the rack
  • No integrated graphics; requires a discrete GPU or headless operation
  • Server‑focused platform and firmware may not suit desktop/workstation software stacks
  • Consumer‑familiar features like an unlocked multiplier are not present
Intel Xeon 6761P

Pros

  • 64 cores / 128 threads for highly parallel workloads
  • 8‑channel DDR5 / MRDIMM up to 8000 MT/s, up to 4 TB capacity
  • 136 PCIe 5.0 lanes for dense I/O configurations
  • Intel AMX and DL Boost for AI acceleration
  • Mature server RAS and virtualization feature set
  • Speed Select Technology for fine‑grained per‑core tuning

Cons

  • High 350W TDP and associated cooling and power requirements
  • Single‑socket only; no 2P scalability
  • Premium pricing typical of high‑core‑count Xeon SKUs
  • No integrated graphics (not expected in this segment)
  • Locked multiplier; tuning is enterprise‑oriented, not enthusiast‑oriented

Competitors & Alternatives

Intel Xeon 6747P

  • AMD EPYC 8534P (Siena, 64c/128t, 200 W, SP6)

    Cloud/Edge Server CPU

    Rival
  • AMD EPYC 8434P (Siena, 48c/96t, 200 W, SP6)

    Cloud/Edge Server CPU

    Rival
  • AMD EPYC 9334 (Genoa, 32c/64t, 210 W, SP5)

    General‑Purpose Server CPU

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon 6737P (32c/64t, 270 W, FCLGA4710)

    Xeon 6 6700P (Granite Rapids‑SP)

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon 6741P (48c/96t, 300 W, FCLGA4710)

    Xeon 6 6700P (Granite Rapids‑SP)

    Rival
  • Same 48 cores/96 threads and 288 MB L3 on Granite Rapids‑SP but 300 W TDP (2.5 GHz base) and single‑socket designs; choose 6741P if you prefer lower TDP or UP builds.

    Compare head-to-head
  • 32 cores with higher per‑core clocks (2.9 GHz base) and 270 W; better for workloads that benefit from fewer but faster cores.

    Compare head-to-head
  • AMD EPYC 8534P
    Alt

    64 cores on Siena at 200 W for cloud/telco and edge environments that prioritize lower power and single‑socket density.

  • AMD EPYC 8434P
    Alt

    48 cores on Siena at 200 W; if your use case is power‑constrained and you can trade Intel’s accelerators and DDR5/MRDIMM capabilities for lower TDP.

  • Intel Xeon 6900P series (LGA 7529)
    Alt

    Higher core counts and triple compute tile configurations for larger scale‑up and AI‑heavy deployments.

Intel Xeon 6761P

Our Verdict on Each

Intel Xeon 6747PRecommended

A capable 48‑core Granite Rapids‑SP part aimed at dual‑socket servers and workstations. It offers strong multi‑threaded throughput, high memory bandwidth with DDR5 or MRDIMM up to 8000 MT/s, and robust I/O with 88 PCIe 5.0 lanes, making it a solid fit for virtualization, databases, and CPU‑side AI inference.

Best for: Dual‑socket servers for virtualization, enterprise databases, and CPU‑side AI inference in data centers

Read the full review
Intel Xeon 6761PRecommended

A very high‑core‑count, single‑socket Granite Rapids CPU with strong memory bandwidth, integrated accelerators, and competitive AI performance, best suited for users who can fully utilize 64 cores and justify the 350W TDP and platform cost.

Best for: Single‑socket servers or workstations that can keep 64 cores busy with parallel, memory‑intensive workloads such as virtualization, databases, analytics, and AI inference, and where high PCIe density and integrated accelerators are valuable.

Read the full review

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Intel Xeon 6747P or Intel Xeon 6761P?

Based on our editorial ratings, the Intel Xeon 6747P comes out ahead with a score of 9/10. 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 6747P or Intel Xeon 6761P?

For gaming, the Intel Xeon 6761P leads with a gaming performance score of 40/100 among Intel Xeon 6747P and Intel Xeon 6761P.

Which uses less power?

The Intel Xeon 6747P has the lowest rated TDP. Power draw across these chips: Intel Xeon 6747P (330 W), Intel Xeon 6761P (350 W).

Do Intel Xeon 6747P and Intel Xeon 6761P 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 6761P has the most cores. Core counts: Intel Xeon 6747P (48 cores), Intel Xeon 6761P (64 cores).

Which is faster in multi-core benchmarks?

The Intel Xeon 6747P posts the highest multi-core benchmark score. Multi-core results: Intel Xeon 6747P (101,685), Intel Xeon 6761P (0). Benchmark figures are approximate and workload-dependent.