NVIDIA has broadened its RTX PRO Blackwell workstation GPU range with two fresh additions unveiled at SIGGRAPH 2025 – the RTX PRO 4000 SFF and the RTX PRO 2000.
Designed with professionals and AI developers in mind, these models aim to deliver high-end performance in more accessible, compact form factors.
The RTX PRO 4000 SFF steps in as the successor to the RTX A4000 SFF, bringing up to 2.5× higher AI performance, 1.7× faster ray tracing, and 1.5× more bandwidth while keeping the same power draw. With 24 GB of ECC-enabled GDDR7 memory, 4× mini DisplayPort 2.1 outputs, and an SFF-friendly dual-slot design, it’s ideal for cramped workstations without compromising power.
Meanwhile, the RTX PRO 2000 delivers 16 GB of ECC-enabled GDDR7 memory, a 70 W TDP, and the same quartet of mini DisplayPort 2.1 connections. NVIDIA claims significant generational gains – 1.6× faster 3D modeling, 1.4× quicker CAD work, and 1.6× speedier rendering. This positions it as a mainstream, energy-efficient option that still offers pro-grade capabilities.
While NVIDIA hasn’t yet revealed official pricing, these GPUs are expected to appear first in systems from major integrators like Dell. The expansion further cements NVIDIA’s dominance in both professional visualization and AI inference workloads – areas where smaller form factor, lower power GPUs can still punch well above their weight.