47score
#48 of 131
Overall rank
NVIDIAMid-range
TITAN V
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VRAM
12 GB
CUDA
5,120
FP32
14.9 TF
Bandwidth
651.3 GB/s
TDP
250W
Boost
1455 MHz
Strengths at a Glance
How it stacks up to the flagship
Each metric is shown as a percentage of the GeForce RTX 5090 D, the strongest card we track.
FP32 compute14.9 TFLOPS14%
vs RTX 5090 D: 104.8 TFLOPS
Memory bandwidth651.3 GB/s36%
vs RTX 5090 D: 1790 GB/s
VRAM capacity12 GB38%
vs RTX 5090 D: 32 GB
Shading units5,12024%
vs RTX 5090 D: 21,760
Power efficiency19/10033%
vs RTX 5090 D: 58/100
Synthetic Benchmarks
Estimated benchmark results
Each result is shown as a share of the RTX 5090 D's score in the same test.
3DMark Time Spy16,920pts
vs RTX 5090 D: 36,000 pts
3DMark Port Royal (RT)8,640pts
vs RTX 5090 D: 18,000 pts
Blender (samples/min)2,444spm
vs RTX 5090 D: 5,200 spm
Geekbench Compute117,600pts
vs RTX 5090 D: 240,000 pts
Performance breakdown
Gaming47
Ray tracing48
AI / Compute49
Creator / 3D47
Power efficiency19
Real-World Gaming
FPS Across Resolutions
1080p · Ultra preset1440p · Ultra preset4K · Ultra preset
Cyberpunk 2077avg 41 fps
1080p
55
1440p
41
4K
26
Call of Duty: MW IIIavg 57 fps
1080p
78
1440p
57
4K
36
Alan Wake 2avg 33 fps
1080p
45
1440p
33
4K
21
Forza Horizon 5avg 59 fps
1080p
81
1440p
60
4K
37
Baldur's Gate 3avg 48 fps
1080p
66
1440p
49
4K
30
Community Feedback
What Owners Say
Owners love the raw compute power for deep learning and rendering. The usual gripe is the high power draw and noise under load.
Pros
- Eats professional 3D workloads for breakfast
- Silent under heavy rendering loads
- Handles massive VRAM datasets easily
- Stays cool with its vapor chamber
Cons
- No consumer gaming software support
- Huge power draw for its era
- Cooling fan noise under load
Supported technologies
DLSSNVENCAV1 Encode
Full specifications
Graphics processor
Core configuration
- CUDA Cores
- 5,120
- Tensor Cores
- 640
- TMUs
- 320
- ROPs
- 96
- L2 cache
- 4.5 MB
Memory
- Size
- 12 GB
- Type
- HBM2
- Bus width
- 3072-bit
- Bandwidth
- 651.3 GB/s
- Memory clock
- 848 MHz
Clocks & throughput
- Base clock
- 1200 MHz
- Boost clock
- 1455 MHz
- FP32 (float)
- 14.9 TFLOPS
- FP16 (half)
- 14.9 TFLOPS
- Pixel rate
- 140 GPixel/s
- Texture rate
- 465.6 GTexel/s
Board & power
- TDP
- 250W
- Suggested PSU
- 500W
- Power connectors
- 1x 6-pin + 1x 8-pin
- Bus interface
- PCIe 3.0 x16
- Length
- 267 mm
- Slot width
- 2-slot
Display & outputs
- Max resolution
- 7680×4320
- Outputs
- 1x HDMI, 3x DisplayPort
API and SDK support
- DirectX
- 12 (12_1)
- Shader Model
- 6.4
- OpenGL
- 4.6
- OpenCL
- 1.2
- Vulkan
- +
- CUDA
- 7.0
Verdict
Our verdict on the TITAN V
NVIDIA's TITAN V is a high-end Volta card built for compute work, hampered by its massive price and lack of gaming-focused drivers.
Get it if you need a GPU for serious scientific computing or AI research without the business restrictions of a Quadro. Skip it if you’re gaming or rendering—a newer card gives you better performance for far less cash.
Buy it if…
- You need top-tier compute for scientific or AI workloads.
- You want the best single-GPU for VR development.
- You are a pro creator who must have maximum VRAM.
Leaderboard
Its place in the overall top
1.9
370 votes
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