NVIDIA Expands Its RTX PRO ‘Blackwell’ Workstation GPU Lineup With Two New Variants at SIGGRAPH 2025: RTX PRO 4000 SFF and RTX PRO 2000

Aug 11, 2025 at 11:44am EDT
NVIDIA RTX Pro 2000 and 4000 graphics cards on a sleek black background.

NVIDIA has launched newer options for the professional markets by expanding its highly popular RTX PRO Blackwell lineup, now offering SFF-compatible options.

NVIDIA's Latest RTX PRO 'Blackwell' GPUs Now Offer Decent Performance Gains Relative to Previous-Gen Models

Team Green has focused specifically on providing an ecosystem with its workstation GPUs, since apart from professional workloads like rendering, the RTX PRO GPUs have seen massive adoption within the AI segment, particularly in the inference category. Now, to make RTX PRO Blackwell GPUs more accessible, the firm has launched the newer RTX PRO 4000 SFF and the RTX PRO 2000 models at SIGGRAPH 2025, offering not only top-tier performance but a decent form factor as well.

Related Story NVIDIA’s RTX PRO 5000 Blackwell GPU Gets Big Memory Upgrade, Now Packs 72 GB For AI & Pro Workloads, 50% More VRAM Capacity

Starting with the SFF model, this variant replaces the RTX A4000 SFF from the previous generation, offering "up to 2.5x higher AI performance, 1.7x higher ray-tracing performance and 1.5x more bandwidth", that too with the same power consumption. The GPU features 24 GB GDDR7 memory with ECC, along with 4x mini DP 2.1 connections and a compact form factor under the SFF certification, which means that the workstation GPU can be used in smaller machines.

Apart from this, NVIDIA has also launched the RTX PRO 2000, a smaller performance model. It features 16 GB GDDR7 with ECC, a 70W TDP, and 4x mini DP 2.1 ports. According to NVIDIA, the newer variant also has impressive generational upgrades, with "1.6x faster 3D modeling, 1.4x faster computer-aided design (CAD) performance and 1.6x quicker rendering speeds." This positions the RTX PRO 2000 as the company's mainstream offering, potentially competing with upcoming options from AMD.

For now, NVIDIA has yet to unveil the pricing of these models, but it seems that they will be available for purchase by major system integrators like Dell.

NVIDIA RTX PRO "Blackwell" GPU Lineup:

Graphics CardGPU CoresAI TOPSFP32 / RT ComputeVRAMMemory Bus / BWForm FactorTDP
RTX PRO 600024064 (GB202)4000125 / 38096 GB GDDR7512-bit / 1792 GB/sDual-Slot / Extended600W
RTX PRO 6000 Max-Q24064 (GB202)3511110 / 33396 GB GDDR7512-bit / 1792 GB/sDual-Slot / Full300W
RTX PRO 6000D19968 (GB202)TBDTBD84 GB GDDR7448-bit / 1568 GB/sDual-Slot / FullTBD
RTX PRO 500014080 (GB202)206465 / 19648-72 GB GDDR7384-bit / 1344 GB/sDual-Slot / Full300W
RTX PRO 450010496 (GB203)168750 / TBD32 GB GDDR7256-bit / 896 GB/sDual-Slot / Full200W
RTX PRO 40008960 (GB203)117837 / 11224 GB GDDR7192-bit / 672 GB/sSingle-Slot / Full140W
RTX PRO 4000 SFF8960 (GB203)77024 / 7324 GB GDDR7192-bit / 432 GB/sDual-Slot / Half70W
RTX PRO 20004352 (GB206)54517 / 5216 GB GDDR7128-bit / 288 GB/sDual-Slot70W

About the author: Muhammad Zuhair is a hardware and technology reporter for Wccftech, specializing in the semiconductor industry and the complex interplay between technology, manufacturing, and geopolitics. His coverage focuses on the corporate strategies and technological roadmaps of industry giants like TSMC, NVIDIA, Samsung, and Intel. Zuhair's expertise lies in deconstructing complex topics such as fabrication nodes (e.g., 2nm process), the economic impact of policies like the CHIPS Act, and the strategic development of AI infrastructure from NVIDIA, AMD and Intel.

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