NVIDIA Expands RTX PRO ‘Blackwell’ Workstation GPU Lineup With New RTX PRO 4000 SFF and RTX PRO 2000 at SIGGRAPH 2025
NVIDIA has announced two new additions to its RTX PRO Blackwell workstation GPU lineup at SIGGRAPH 2025, aiming to deliver high performance in more compact and power-efficient form factors. The launch includes the RTX PRO 4000 SFF and RTX PRO 2000, both designed for professional workloads such as rendering, CAD, and AI inference while fitting into a wider range of workstation setups.
NVIDIA’s RTX PRO series has been widely adopted not only in traditional professional visualization markets but also in AI, particularly for inference workloads where efficient compute performance is critical. With these new models, NVIDIA is targeting professionals who need powerful performance in space-constrained environments or lower-power deployments.
The RTX PRO 4000 SFF replaces the previous-generation RTX A4000 SFF, offering significant generational upgrades including up to 2.5× higher AI performance, 1.7× higher ray tracing throughput, and 1.5× more memory bandwidth, all while maintaining the same power consumption. The GPU comes equipped with 24 GB of ECC-enabled GDDR7 memory, four mini DisplayPort 2.1 connections, and an SFF-certified compact design, making it ideal for small form factor workstations without compromising on performance.
The RTX PRO 2000 is a lower-power mainstream option with 16 GB of ECC-enabled GDDR7, a 70W TDP, and four mini DisplayPort 2.1 outputs. NVIDIA reports generational improvements of 1.6× faster 3D modeling, 1.4× faster CAD workflows, and 1.6× quicker rendering speeds, positioning it as an efficient yet capable solution for design professionals, engineers, and content creators.
NVIDIA has not yet revealed official pricing for these GPUs, but availability is expected soon through major system integrators such as Dell and other professional workstation vendors.
Would you choose a compact SFF workstation GPU if it offered the same performance as larger models?