The Nvidia RTX 50-series is one of the most controversial graphics card launches in many years, but that doesn’t stop the top cards being some of the best you can buy — if you can find them at a fair price. Two of the top options worth considering are the RTX 5080 and 5070 Ti: two powerful GPUs with lots of fast memory, plenty of CUDA cores, and the latest generations of RT and tensor cores.
But how do these two cards stack up? With prices flying wild, here’s how to nail down which graphics card is best for you.
Pricing and availability
Stock levels are almost non-existent due to ongoing production problems — leading some cards to ship without the right internal hardware – so pricing has gone completely bananas, on top of the manufacturer-mandated price rises.
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At the time of writing, the RTX 5070 Ti is sometimes available for around $800, but you’re much more likely to find one at around $1,000. The RTX 5080 is going for as much as $2,000, but you can sometimes find them between $1,400 and $1,800.
Specs
Nvidia RTX 5080 | Nvidia RTX 5070 Ti | |
CUDA Cores | 10,752 | 8960 |
RT Cores | 84, 4th generation | 70, 4th generation |
Tensor Cores | 336, 5th generation | 280, 5th generation |
Boost clock | 2.6GHz | 2.45GHz |
Memory size | 16GB GDDR7 | 16GB GDDR7 |
Memory bus | 256-bit | 256-bit |
Memory speed | 30Gbps | 28Gbps |
Memory bandwidth | 960GBps | 896GBps |
TBP | 360W | 320W |
Performance
We tested the RTX 5080 when it first debuted, and found it a very capable graphics card — albeit one that falls behind both the RTX 5090 and RTX 4090, by enough of a margin that 4090 owners must be very happy with their last-gen purchase.
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Although we haven’t had a chance to test the RTX 5070 Ti, yet, it’s an easy one to compare, because it’s about as powerful as an RTX 4080 Super. In fact, the 4080 Super is slightly faster in some cases, though the added multi frame gen support with the RTX 50-series does give it an advantage in certain games.
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The 7900 XTX isn’t a bad analogy for the 5070 Ti in non-RT games, but when ray tracing is turned on the AMD cards fall far behind, so it’s not a universal analog.
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In Nvidia’s own graphs, it claimed that the 5070 Ti was around 20% faster than the 4070 Ti (non-Super) which kind of works out in the wider third-party testing.
Although the RTX 5080 is the stronger card, it only works out around 10-15% faster than the 5070 Ti and it does it while demanding more power, and with a price that’s at least 50% higher.
Neither are great, but the 5070 Ti is better value
It just isn’t worth spending $500+ more on a 5080 to maybe get 10% added performance.