CPU Comparison
Intel Xeon 6767P vs Intel Xeon 6768P-B
A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The Intel Xeon 6767P is a 64-core, 128-thread server processor built for high-performance data center and AI workloads, featuring DDR5/MRDIMM support and 88 PCIe 5.0 lanes on the Intel 3 process.
The Bottom Line
Overview & Launch
Specifications Compared
Performance Compared
Productivity
Gaming
Virtualization
Efficiency
Specialized Performance
AI / ML
- Intel claims meaningful performance-per-watt improvements over prior-generation Xeons for AI workloads such as Stable Diffusion BS1 INT8 and vLLM inference using the Xeon 6767P.
- AMX accelerators provide hardware support for matrix operations used in many AI models.
- On-die accelerators like DSA and IAA help with data movement and analytics tasks common in AI pipelines.
- AMX (Advanced Matrix Extensions) accelerate matrix operations for inference and training
- No dedicated GPU, but strong CPU AI and QAT/DLB/DSA acceleration for data movement and compression
Content Creation
Gaming
- This is a server processor without integrated graphics, not intended or validated for consumer gaming.
- Gaming performance is not a relevant evaluation metric for this SKU.
- Server-focused SKU with no integrated graphics
- Gaming performance is irrelevant for this use case
Industry Impact
Best CPU by Use Case
Target Audience
Strengths & Weaknesses
Pros
- 64 P-cores and 128 threads for parallel server workloads.
- 336 MB of L3 cache.
- 88 PCIe 5.0 lanes for high-speed I/O and GPU attach.
- 8-channel DDR5/MRDIMM with up to 4 TB support.
- On-die accelerators (AMX, DSA, IAA, DLB, QAT) for specialized offload.
- Intel 3 process targeting improved performance and efficiency.
- Dual-socket scalability via four UPI links at 24 GT/s.
Cons
- 350 W TDP demands robust cooling and power delivery.
- No integrated graphics.
- Requires server platforms supporting FCLGA4710 and appropriate memory.
- High cost typical of high-end server CPUs.
- Overkill for light or thread-limited workloads.
Pros
- 64 P-cores / 128 threads for high-throughput workloads
- 1S-only design simplifies software licensing and NUMA tuning
- 8-channel DDR5-6400 with up to 2.25 TB capacity
- 48 PCIe Gen4/Gen5 lanes for GPUs, NICs, and NVMe
- Integrated QAT, DLB, DSA, AMX, and vRAN Boost accelerators
- Strong virtualization and security feature set (TDX, SGX, MK-TME, VMD)
Cons
- High 325 W TDP requires robust cooling and power delivery
- Single-socket only; no multi-socket upgrade path
- No integrated graphics; not suitable for headless client scenarios without a GPU
- Launch pricing is high relative to mainstream server CPUs
- Benchmark data for this exact SKU is still limited
Competitors & Alternatives
Intel Xeon 6767P
- AMD EPYC 9754 (Bergamo)Rival
Server/Cloud
- AMD EPYC 9684X (Genoa-X)Rival
Server/HPC
- AMD EPYC 9575FRival
Server (High Frequency)
- Compare head-to-headIntel Xeon 6768PRival
Server/Data Center
- Compare head-to-headIntel Xeon 6760PRival
Server/Data Center
- AMD EPYC 9754Alt
High core density with E-cores for throughput-oriented cloud workloads.
- AMD EPYC 9684XAlt
Large 3D V-Cache L3 for capacity-sensitive HPC and database workloads.
Intel Xeon 6768P-B
- AMD EPYC 9554 (64-core, Genoa)Rival
Server
- AMD EPYC 9654 (96-core, Genoa)Rival
Server
- Intel Xeon w9-3495X (56-core, Sapphire Rapids-WS)Rival
Workstation
- Intel Xeon 6768P (64-core, Granite Rapids-SP, 4S/8S)Rival
Server
- Ampere Altra Max (128-core, Arm)Rival
Server / Cloud
- Intel Xeon 6766P-BAlt
Similar 1S-only Granite Rapids-SP SKU with slightly lower clocks and potentially better pricing.
- AMD EPYC 9554Alt
64 Zen 4 cores with 12-channel DDR5 and 128 PCIe 5 lanes for better memory and I/O bandwidth.
- Intel Xeon 6767P (1S, 64-core)Alt
1S Granite Rapids-SP variant with different turbo/feature balance; may offer better single-thread performance.
- Intel Xeon w9-3495XAlt
Sapphire Rapids workstation CPU with 56 cores and higher clocks, suitable if you prefer mature platform and don’t need 64 cores.
- AMD EPYC 9454 (48-core, Genoa)Alt
Lower core count but better per-core performance and efficiency for mixed workloads.
Our Verdict on Each
A high-end Xeon 6 P-core part built for scale-up and scale-out servers requiring strong per-core performance, very high core count, and abundant I/O for GPUs and accelerators. Its 350 W TDP demands serious platform design and cooling, but the combination of Intel 3, large shared cache, DDR5/MRDIMM up to 8000 MT/s, and on-die accelerators (AMX, QAT, DSA, IAA, DLB) makes it a compelling choice for AI and HPC.
Best for: Deploying scale-up or scale-out servers for AI, HPC, or high-throughput database workloads where core count, memory bandwidth, and PCIe 5.0 I/O are critical.
Read the full reviewA powerful single-socket Xeon optimized for high core count and accelerator-rich workloads, best suited for users who want maximum per-socket performance without multi-socket complexity.
Best for: Single-socket servers or workstations that need high core count, strong memory bandwidth, and integrated accelerators without multi-socket licensing complexity.
Read the full reviewFrequently Asked Questions
Which is better, Intel Xeon 6767P or Intel Xeon 6768P-B?
Based on our editorial ratings, the Intel Xeon 6767P 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 6767P or Intel Xeon 6768P-B?
For gaming, the Intel Xeon 6768P-B leads with a gaming performance score of 0/100 among Intel Xeon 6767P and Intel Xeon 6768P-B.
Which uses less power?
The Intel Xeon 6768P-B has the lowest rated TDP. Power draw across these chips: Intel Xeon 6767P (350 W), Intel Xeon 6768P-B (325 W).
Do Intel Xeon 6767P and Intel Xeon 6768P-B use the same socket?
No. They use different sockets (Intel Xeon 6767P: FCLGA4710, Intel Xeon 6768P-B: FCBGA5026 (LGA 4710)), so each needs a compatible motherboard.
Which is faster in multi-core benchmarks?
The Intel Xeon 6768P-B posts the highest multi-core benchmark score. Multi-core results: Intel Xeon 6768P-B (0). Benchmark figures are approximate and workload-dependent.