NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Appears On Multiple Retailers: This 96GB Monster Blackwell Card Costs Over $10,000 In Various Regions

Sarfraz Khan
NVIDIA's 96GB RTX PRO 6000 Matches Four RTX 5090s on a 230B AI Model While Drawing a Quarter the Power 1

The RTX PRO 6000 can cost a leg and an arm, but it gives you a whopping 96 GB VRAM capacity. The card is now selling in various regions for over ten grand.

NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Spotted on Japanese and EU Retailers: Starting at €8,982 Including Taxes

NVIDIA's top-of-the-line Blackwell offering in the Professional segment is now being listed on multiple retailers around the world. The GPU, which was launched officially in March, can now be purchased in regions like the EU, NA, and Japan, with prices starting at around US$10,000.

Related Story China’s Largest Retailer, JD, Is Selling Banned NVIDIA RTX 5090 & RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell GPUs, But These Are Definitely Smuggled

NVIDIA's RTX PRO 6000 is currently listed on UK retailer Lambda-Tek for £7659.18, including VAT,  which translates to US$10,166. The GPU is also listed at other EU-based retailers, starting at €8,982 or US$10,190 including VAT. At another EU retailer, the price was much higher at €10,922, which translates to US$12,391.

RTX PRO 6000 lambda tek
RTX PRO 6000 EU retailer
RTX PRO 6000 EU retailer 1

These prices were obvious at the time of launch since we had already seen a listing for over $10,000 at a Canadian retailer previously. The GPU is also listed on a Japanese retailer for over 1.6M Yen or US$11,326, but surprisingly, one guy on Reddit was able to receive a $5000 grant from NVIDIA and has posted a few pics of the GPU.

The GPU is a dual-slot card with a design similar to the RTX 5090 Founders Edition. Since both utilize the same GB202 die, there are a lot of similarities between these cards, but the RTX PRO 6000 is the maxed-out version. While the RTX 5090 ships with 21,760 CUDA cores, the RTX PRO 6000 has 24,064. However, the most significant change is the tripling of the memory capacity on the latter, which is currently unfeasible on the RTX 5090.

NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000
NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 IO

The RTX PRO 6000 brings a whopping 96 GB of GDDR7 memory, doubling the VRAM capacity compared to its predecessor, the RTX 6000 ADA. With such a massive VRAM size, the RTX PRO 6000 is ready to take on intensive AI workloads and will be ideal for startups and other small businesses. The RTX PRO 6000 has some unique features that the GeForce RTX 50 misses, such as the Multi-Instance GPU (MIG), which allows the GPU to be partitioned into four instances for better multitasking by distributing the workload to prevent interference.

The GPU can still play games even though it's not aimed at gamers, but one shouldn't expect it to deliver any solid performance uplifts. It will be mostly equivalent to the RTX 5090, but does perform slightly better in path tracing tests.

News Sources: Videocardz, Overclock3D, @jisakuhibi,

Sarfraz Khan Photo

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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