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CPU Benchmark Hierarchy 2026 — Compare 1000+ Processors by Performance

Free CPU benchmark chart updated June 2026. Compare 1000+ desktop and laptop processors from Intel Core Ultra 200/300, 14th/13th/12th Gen, AMD Ryzen 9000/8000/7000/5000 series with single-core and multi-core benchmark scores, full specifications, architecture details, and TDP comparisons.

Features

  • Data updated June 2026 — covers Intel Core Ultra 200V/200S/300, AMD Ryzen 9000/8000/7000, and more
  • Comprehensive database — 1000+ CPUs from Intel and AMD across all segments
  • Desktop, mobile, and workstation processors — single-core and multi-core benchmark scores
  • Full specifications — cores, threads, architecture, process, cache, clock speeds, TDP, socket
  • Browse the full CPU list sorted by benchmark score by default
  • Use the search bar to find a specific CPU by name or keyword
  • Click filter chips to narrow by manufacturer (Intel, AMD) or device type (Desktop, Mobile)
  • Toggle 'Compare mode' and select CPUs to view a side-by-side spec comparison
  • Click any CPU row to expand full specifications

Frequently Asked Questions

Benchmark scores are aggregated from standardized CPU performance tests measuring both single-core and multi-threaded performance. Higher scores indicate better raw processing power. Real-world performance varies based on cooling, motherboard, RAM speed, and workload type.
Single-core score measures how fast one CPU core performs — important for gaming, web browsing, and applications that can't use many cores simultaneously. Multi-core score measures all cores working together — important for video editing, 3D rendering, code compilation, and other parallel workloads.
Yes, they use the same benchmark scale. Mobile CPUs are tested at their typical TDP settings, which are lower than desktop parts. A laptop Core i9-14900HX scores lower than a desktop i9-14900K due to power and thermal constraints, and this difference is accurately reflected in the scores.
Modern Intel CPUs (12th gen and newer) use a hybrid architecture with Performance-cores (P-cores) for demanding tasks and Efficient-cores (E-cores) for background tasks. The total core count includes both types. Single-core scores primarily reflect P-core performance.
All specifications — core counts, clock speeds, cache sizes, TDP, socket, process node, and architecture — are sourced from official manufacturer datasheets and verified against multiple hardware databases. Data represents reference specifications; actual performance may vary by OEM configuration.
The CPU database is updated regularly to include newly released processors. The latest update was June 2026, covering all major CPU launches through that date including Intel Arrow Lake/Panther Lake, AMD Ryzen 9000 series, and more.

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