NVIDIA RTX 50 Series Hotspot Temperature Readings Are Back Through HWMonitor Utility

Jul 14, 2026 at 11:03am EDT
A close-up of an NVIDIA GeForce RTX graphics card with visible thermal paste on the GPU and the 'NVIDIA GPU Hotspot' graphic in the background.

Despite NVIDIA's removal of the Hotspot temperature measurements, CPUID developers have deployed the feature to their popular hardware monitoring utility.

NVIDIA Killed RTX 50 Hotspot Readings, but HWMonitor 1.65 Just Brought Them Back With Two Sensors

While NVIDIA may have dropped the Hotspot temperature measurements from the Blackwell GeForce RTX 50 series graphics cards, the sensors reportedly do exist. We saw how modders brought back the hotspot monitoring through modding, which revealed how some GPUs were thermal throttling despite showing normal average GPU temperatures.

Related Story NVIDIA GPU Hotspot Temperature Has Been Unlocked Through Mods, & Shows Widespread Thermal Issues Affecting RTX 50 GPUs That Throttle Gaming Performance

The GPUs, therefore, were affected by high hotspot temperatures, resulting in inferior gaming performance. The experiment proved that the sensors do exist, but the measurements were disabled by NVIDIA for unknown reasons. Since hotspot monitoring is crucial in understanding proper cooler contact and reasons for thermal throttling, one would want to have such a utility to measure hotspot temperatures.

Thankfully, CPUID has made it possible and has brought back the hotspot temperature monitoring to the official HWMonitor version 1.65 utility. As per the release notes, one can now measure the hotspot temperatures on the GeForce RTX 50 series, which weren't possible on the previous versions. Now apart from regular average GPU and VRAM temperatures, users will be able to continuously monitor real-time hotspot readings directly from the software

User @d9cTB showed what the new interface looks like. The HWMonitor window reportedly shows two different HotSpot readings. Apparently, one is for the GPU while the other one is for the power delivery, i.e., VRM. Inclusion of both is highly convenient and appreciable. This will allow users to monitor and figure out if their GPUs are thermal throttled due to high temperatures. Hopefully, more hardware utility makers will include the latest feature in their software for such measurements.

News Source: CPUID

About the author: Sarfraz Khan is a hardware reporter with a focus on PC components and the builder community. With years of experience writing about PC hardware and laptops, his work has been featured on several reputable technology publications. Sarfraz's hands-on experience is demonstrated through his first-person accounts of using and comparing different hardware configurations, providing practical and relatable insights for everyday users. His technical analysis is respected by peers in the enthusiast community and has been cited by specialized hardware sites such as Germany's Igor's Lab.

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