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Nvidia RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell GPU is listed for $8,565 at US retailer — 26% more expensive than the last-gen


Kaz

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Nvidia's newly announced RTX Pro Blackwell GPU listings have gone live at Connections, a US-based IT retailer targeting enterprise customers. Prices start as low as $700 (via Videocardz).

The retailer's website also lists a wide array of unannounced Blackwell GPUs, like the RTX Pro 2000 and RTX Pro 4000 SFF Blackwell, along with their expected prices. We're already aware of the specifications, so this gives us some idea of where the prices stand versus the last generation. Note that these are premature listings that could very well deviate from shelf prices, so we shouldn't read too much into them.

 

The RTX Pro Blackwell family is the workstation counterpart to Nvidia's Blackwell lineup of GPUs, with a new "Pro" modifier to further distinguish these products from other offerings. With the help of 24Gb (3GB) GDDR7 modules, Nvidia has managed a 50% increase in VRAM capacity across the same bus width compared to standard GeForce RTX 50 desktop GPUs. The most interesting thing is the flagship RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell, which packs 96GB of memory in clam-shell mode, where each side of the PCB can host 48GB.

Connections published product listing pages with prices for these Blackwell ProViz GPUs, but they are not yet for sale. The premier RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell has been listed starting at $8,565 ($8,435 in bulk) for a 26% increase over last generation's RTX 6000 Ada. Nvidia offers this GPU in Workstation, Workstation Max-Q, and Server editions; the Max-Q's TGP is capped at 300W, while the server variant relies on external cooling through server fans.

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Professional GPUs are still riding the AI surge.

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