⚡ Power your ambition with Ryzen 7 5800X — where speed meets unstoppable performance.
The AMD Ryzen 7 5800X is a high-performance unlocked desktop processor featuring 8 cores and 16 threads, a 4.7 GHz max boost clock, and 36 MB cache. Designed for the advanced Socket AM4 platform, it supports PCIe 4.0 on X570 and B550 motherboards and DDR4-3200 memory. Ideal for gamers, creators, and professionals seeking top-tier multitasking and overclocking capabilities, it delivers elite 100+ FPS gaming and efficient productivity with a 105W power envelope.







| ASIN | B0815XFSGK |
| Best Sellers Rank | #16 in Computer CPU Processors |
| Brand | AMD |
| Cache Memory Installed Size | 36 |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 23,227 Reviews |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00730143312714 |
| Item Dimensions L x W | 1.57"L x 1.57"W |
| Item Height | 6 millimeters |
| Item Type Name | Desktop Processor |
| Item Weight | 2.8 Ounces |
| Manufacturer | AMD |
| Model Number | AMD Ryzen 7 5800X |
| Platform | Linux, Windows |
| Processor Brand | AMD |
| Processor Core Count | 8 |
| Processor Count | 8 |
| Processor Number of Concurrent Threads | 16 |
| Processor Series | AMD Ryzen 7 |
| Processor Socket | Socket AM4 |
| Processor Speed | 4.7 GHz |
| Secondary Cache | 4 MB |
| UPC | 730143312714 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 3 year manufacturer |
| Wattage | 105 watts |
D**S
Amazing CPU for Gaming!
I have had this CPU for around exactly one year now. Normally I do all my tech reviews fairly early but I wanted to really use this chip, overclock it, game, and do lighting editing as well. To start off my full system is a Ryzen 5800X, Asus X570-Pro board, 32GB of 3600mhz G.Skill CL16 memory (4x8GB), EVGA G3 Supernova 850 watt 80+ Gold PSU, EVGA RTX 2070 Super GPU, Cooler Master NR600 Case, Noctua NH-D15 Chromax Black Edition CPU cooler. I have two Gen 4 NVMe drives and 4 normal sata SSD drives. My case is filled with all Cooler Master Masterpro ARGB high CFM airflow fans. I’m also using an internal wireless card as well as my particular x570 board doesn’t come with onboard WiFi. My reason for stating all this is the airflow and cooling in my case is exceptional. I have one of the highest airflow cases, with some of the best fans, one of the best CPU coolers, and I’m using Thermal Grizzly Kryonaunt paste which is hands down the best CPU test for overclocking and temps in general imo. Stating all this because YOUR temps may be different than mine as well as your results. To start of with the chip I’ve not had ONE single issue with it so far after a year of use. ALL I have done to it after installing it in place of the Ryzen 3600 that it replaced was I enabled DOCP on my memory which is AMDs version of XMP and I enabled PBO on my chip with the max limit set at 200mhz. That it all I touched. This chip boosts to 5.1ghz when using 2-3 cores or less easily and even if under full load will still stay around 4.75ghz on all 8 cores at 100% load. In a more realistic load like gaming it runs around 4.75-4.95ghz. Under full load like Prime95 my temps top out around 74C. Idle is around low 30s and while gaming it bounces around 55-65C. It runs super fast and super cool. This is all on air cooling too. When going from the 3600 to the 5800X while every single other aspect of my system remained the same I gained anywhere from 10 fps to over 20 fps on some games. I play at 1440P as well. If you play at 1080P your results will be even better. This is the best chip I’ve ever used and owned. My RTX 2070 Super is overclocked 1100mhz on the memory and 140mhz on the core. On benchmarks my scores beat all stock and even factory OC 2080 Supers. They also beat almost all RTX 3060 ti results as well. I’ve never played a single game where this chip bottlenecks my card ever. Whereas with the 3600 it did from time to time. Especially in games using DLSS which renders the game at a much lower resolution then upscales it. That makes the game way more CPU demanding and in titles with DLSS my fps increase was huge. Absolutely amazing cpu for gaming and you don’t have to do anything other than enable PBO. Gone are the days of manual overclocking to get all the performance you paid for. The chips auto boost themselfs as high as they can go basically all by themselves now. If you have any Zen + or Zen 2 chip and wanna upgrade to Zen 3 aka Ryzen 5000 I say it’s well worth it for gaming. The IPC increase on Ryzen 5000 over 3000 series is huge. Over 30% faster. I’ve included pictures of my setup, CPUz info, benchmark results, MSI Afterburner temperature info after playing Witcher 3 at 1440P on Ultra settings for hours, and many other others. The chip boosts high, runs cool, requires basically no knowledge to get max performance from it outside of TWO toggles in the bios, and at its current price is an amazing value imo. Fast enough to pair any GPU on the market with it if you can find one. I’ve been wanting a 3080 forever now but just no luck. I paid the MSRP of 450 for this chip and don’t regret it at all. No crashes, no issues ever, never breaks 70C while daily use/gaming no matter how long, boosts over 5ghz, and has enough cores/threads if you wanna stream and multitask while gaming you’re good to go. I think AMD did an amazing job with Zen 3 and if you’re interested in the 5800X for gaming/streaming you won’t go wrong. Hope this review helped and if it does please leave a like. Enjoy the pics and thanks for reading.
O**N
Awesome CPU I cannot even max it out with my workload
Just built a new rig after my gaming laptop began stuttering and dying under the workload I put it through. I spent about $1300 for my new machine. I Trade stocks, upscale videos in Topaz to 4k takes about 30 minutes for a 5 minute video. I also use premiere pro. I have had premiere pro rendering a H264 high quality video and Topaz upscaling a video to 4k and temps have gotten at max 68c. I normally idle around 39c. I included a screenshot of the maxed out cpu and temps. Despite all this I can still watch YouTube, trade, browse with no lag or issues even with the cpu loaded with intensive programs. My laptop processor doing the same task would get up to 95c and begin glitching and stuttering all over the place. I got this processor work horse at $153 dollars. I plan to use it for many years to come. I recently returned to the pc building scene and saved a lot of money compared to buying from the big box stores yet again. First off it was cheaper than a gaming laptop, more future proof as I can re use parts if I ever want to upgrade. It also can handle every task I through at it and keep going. I literally do not have the ability to max it out lol. I have it paired with a Asus RTX 4060 8 gig OC edition graphics card. 32 gigs of ram. For cooling I went with thermal grisly paste and a 240mm Dracaena water cooler $54. Radiator mounted to the top of the case. The graphics card is working hard that’s for sure but I spent $349 on it so I fine with it. There is no bottleneck. AMD has really impressed me, last desktop one I had was a vishera 8350 power hog. After that all my builds were Intel. Do I game? not so much. I game in the stock market that’s it. Rendering however is just as intensive. If you don’t want to break the bank and want an outstanding processor get this cpu it is awesome. I actually paid for the computer with just stock option scalping.
N**K
please read the first paragraph at least!!
so, i was one of the (statistically few) who hit the silicon lottery and struck dirt. basically, my 5800x was defective. this is just a PSA, if you encounter BSODs/crashes to reboot/fatal hardware errors after installing your new CPU, it is likely defective. i was getting WHEA_UNCORRECTABLE_ERROR at random times, event IDs WHEA-18 and 46. no combination of the CPU with a new motherboard, different ram, 1 stick of ram, XMP profiles off, PBO disabled, bios updates, windows reinstalls, chipset driver updates, or other device driver updates resolved the issue for me. it would occur under any load at any temperature. it's also worth mentioning that it worked fine for about 5 days before issues started to happen. if your PC is producing errors you simply cannot resolve and it started with the new CPU, please return it ASAP!! i have ordered a new one already and shipped the defective unit back. i used my old ryzen 2600 to isolate the 5800x as the issue, and my system runs completely stable as long as i keep it on. i'm sad it was defective, but ultimately, i'm not going to let it damage my opinion of the CPU, as defective products are guaranteed to slip through here and there, and amazon is extremely good about their return policy in my experience. anyway, with that out of the way, let's talk about the CPU itself. when mine was functioning normally, it was awesome. coming from an old ryzen 5 2600, the performance gain of the 5800x is a night and day difference. it's 3 years old now, but its price and still-relevant performance make it an immensely good value. it squeezed new fps gains out of my gtx 1080, and was far more than enough for my new rtx 4070. the gains in performance are even more obvious now that i'm back on the 2600 while i wait for my replacement to arrive. it was as easy to install as any other AM3/AM4 CPU. i will give a heads up however that it does run hot and is known to do so. however, AMD has explicitly stated that even 90°C is safe at full load. a high quality air cooler will be enough if you don't plan on doing serious overclocking, like me. a thermalright peerless assassin or scythe fuma should be more than enough for stock clocks with PBO left on auto. i paired this with 32gb of gskill ripjaws V with 3600mhz XMP profile, and the two paired wonderfully. the motherboard i ended up with is an MSI MAG B550 tomahawk max wifi, but the CPU will work just fine on most B450/X470 motherboards as long as your bios is up to date!!!! please do not let my disclaimer dissuade you from buying this amazing CPU, it can happen to anyone who buys any CPU, from Intel too! i can't wait for my replacement to arrive and complete my system, i wholeheartedly recommend this CPU for great performance per dollar.
J**A
AMD at Its Finest
The Ryzen 7 5800X at the $170 price point for which I purchased it is an amazing value. It's on the old side at this point, two generations behind the most recent 9000 series and on the previous socket AM4. I already had an AM4 board in my computer with a Ryzen 5 5600 so I only had to the buy the processor. If you're building a completely new computer you should probably go with one of the newer AM5 chips, but if you're like me and you only need the CPU, then it's a great buy for less than two hundred dollars. It's a great gaming CPU, and good for heavily-threaded loads like video editing and 3D modeling, both of which I've dabbled in and found this processor to handle them nicely compared to what I've had previously. It does run a little hot, but I bought a decent dual-tower air cooler (Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 EVO) and it keeps it in the low 80s under a Prime95 stress test which is totally acceptable. Is it a huge step up from my the 5600 in all cases? Not really, but the additional cores (2 more to be exact, which means 4 more threads overall) has definitely benefitted my ability to record and stream gameplay without absolutely tanking the performance which is the main reason I wanted to upgrade in the first place. It also does seem to make the games perform a little better, I didn't think to make an exact frame-for-frame comparison before putting in the 5800X and reinstalling windows. I know for a fact though that the performance while streaming has improved very noticeably, I used to lose about 30-40% framerate when I would hit "start streaming" in OBS, now it barely goes down 10%, even less in some games. Like I said, if you're buying all the parts for a new computer (CPU, motherboard, RAM, etc.) then you should get a newer one if you can afford it. But, if you're already on AM4, 16 threads of Zen 3 for less than two hundred bucks is a steal, especially when it cost almost $500 when it was first launched.
C**S
4rth fastest Consumer CPU on the Market? I Guess It is.
It's hard to believe that just 5 years ago an 8 core 16 thread CPU cost well over $100 USD and now the 2700 can be found for $150 (as is could for the last two years) while the 3700X for $279.99 is quite a bargain as well. So is the 5800X worth 33% of a 2016 8/16 from Intel? Or 50% more than a 3700X? 250% more than a 2700?!? That's actually a tough call, so I'll go with a *maybe.* If you already have a 2700 and game, 4k and don't rely too heavily on Photoshop or rendering scenes/videos, then no, I don't think it is. If you have a 3700X or 9900/K or better that turns into a hard no unless you really need those extra few minutes it will save you rendering over the course of a day (if that). Now if you have a 2700X or lower and play games at something =/<1440p then you may certainly want to consider it. Besides noticing an immediate difference in little things, like how quick the mouse is on my desktop compared to a 2700, my in-game FPS is up roughly 10% @1440p with a paltry XFX 5700 non-XT. I definitely didn't expect that much of a difference, but since I still plan on upgrading my GPU, most likely in late August or September when the lower prices in the East start making their way to the Western markets, I thought "Why not, you'll just end up spending the extra money on something silly, and you've been squirreling money away since the launch of the 6800/XT and 6900XT's were released. By the time I settled on what GPU I wanted and would benefit me most when I work from home, the prices were so silly I didn't want to contribute to an unhealthy consumer market considering I have another PC I use for 85% of my work. To my surprise, it did help my GPU out quite a bit more than expected, while greatly improving efficiency in CAD. While the gaming performance is great, and I don't anticipate hitting any bottlenecks with the 6800XT or 3080Ti (the 3080 would be a fantastic match for gaming and home office work *if* it wasn't so RAM starved, which I see being a big problem within the next couple of years; what was Nvidia thinking? Bleh, giving it the same amount of RAM as mid-range cards from 2016?). The chip itself burns through most workstation tasks faster than any other 8/16 I have ever used. At stock speeds it sips power, runs very cool (I'm using the stock Wraith Prism that came with the 65 Watt 2700) even when gaming, while having no problem keeping it's 4.7 boost for as long as needed. In CPU intensive games like Cyberpunk 2077, Bannerlord or Red Dead Redemption 2 the chip laughs as it might hit 78c and continues to jog along at 4.7, without missing a beat until the action slows down. Baldur's Gate 3 is also a joy to play over the 2700 in battles since it runs through so many different scenarios and variables with every NPC before taking that character's action for the round. 7-10 seconds per NPC has turned into 1-2, which is fantastic when you have 30 bad guys on the field. That said, it is a pretty good value for the money if you are upgrading a pre-2017 system or a 6/12 or lower thread count CPU. If you're building a mid-range to high-end gaming PC it's fantastic, and is a great option for a home workstation. I could even see running a virtual machine or two with it in a pinch. It really is a dynamic, blazing fast CPU that will probably last a good 3-7 years depending on your needs.
K**A
Nice cpu for gaming
Been using this cpu for a few months now and it’s holding up pretty well. Good for games that are cpu heavy and runs pretty well. Easy to install and good for the money. It would be good to pair it up with a good cooler.
I**N
5800X Review: A Top Performer with High Temps, High Value - A Comprehensive Analysis by a User
As a user of the AMD Ryzen 7 5800X 8-core and 16-thread Unlocked Desktop Processor, I have been using it for around a year now. My system consists of a Ryzen 5800X, an Asus X570-Pro board, 32GB of 3600mhz G.Skill CL16 memory, an EVGA G3 Supernova 850 watt 80+ Gold PSU, an EVGA RTX 2070 Super GPU, a Cooler Master NR600 Case, and a Noctua NH-D15 Chromax Black Edition CPU cooler. I have exceptional airflow and cooling in my case, and I have not had a single issue with the chip after a year of use. I simply enabled DOCP on my memory and PBO on my chip, and the chip boosts to 5.1ghz when using 2-3 cores and runs around 4.75-4.95ghz while gaming. My temps are around low 30s at idle and 55-65C while gaming, and the chip runs super fast and super cool. I upgraded from a Ryzen 3600 to the 5800X, and I gained anywhere from 10 fps to over 20 fps on some games, playing at 1440P. The chip is the best one I've ever used and owned, and I paid the MSRP of 450 for it and don't regret it at all. It runs smoothly with no crashes or issues, and it never breaks 70C while daily use/gaming, no matter how long. It has enough cores and threads to handle streaming and multitasking while gaming. However, my CPU runs hot, with stress testing reaching 75C quickly and sometimes maxing at 85C, even with an Arctic Liquid Cooler 2 280mm AIO and a Phanteks P500A case with high airflow. I've found others reporting the same issue, and it seems exclusive to the 5800x. I've done some extended stress testing, and it doesn't seem to thermal throttle, but while gaming it peaks around 68C. I've tried to mitigate the high temps by enabling ECO Mode in the AMD Ryzen Master software, which drops the total power draw and maintains the same single-core score in Cinebench, with virtually no effect on gaming. After 9 months of using the CPU, I have spent a lot of time optimizing and looking for ways to improve my cooling and performance. My best case results are by utilizing the settings found in the Advanced AMD Overclocking section of my MXI X570 BIOS. I have manually set the power limits, and I've used the curve optimizer to set negative offsets to my cores. This gives me the best undervolted temps, with 30 minutes of Cinebench R23 Multi peaking at 78C and average gaming temps of 55C-60C. Overall, the 5800X is a top performer in its tier, but its value is questionable, and it runs warm. The 5600x is currently the value/performance king of the new series, and the 5900x has notable advantages for only $100 more. The 5800X is also the end of the line for the AM4 platform, and with the price being high, it may not be a compelling purchase for most people. However, for those who are enthusiasts and want to buy into this series, it is a great upgrade.
M**Y
Good value
Best gaming CPU for AM4 motherboards
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