NVIDIA logo
Buy on Amazon logo
$199
New
VS
AMD logo
Buy on Amazon logo
$152
New

Aggregate performance score

We've compared GeForce GTX 1660 and Radeon Pro W5500, covering specs and all relevant benchmarks.

GeForce GTX 1660 +14%
12
6GB , 120W
Radeon Pro W5500
11
8GB , 125W

GeForce GTX 1660 outperforms Radeon Pro W5500 by a moderate 14% based on our aggregate benchmark results.

Summary

We compared two graphics cards: the GeForce GTX 1660 with 6GB VRAM (Turing architecture), against the Radeon Pro W5500 with 8GB VRAM (RDNA architecture). Both graphics cards offer competitive value for their respective price points. The GeForce GTX 1660 is more power-efficient, consuming 120W compared to 125W. On this page, you will find detailed benchmark comparisons, technical specifications, value score analysis, and key differences to help you choose the right graphics card for your needs and budget.

Key Differences

An overview of the main advantages of each graphics card

Reasons to consider the GeForce GTX 1660

14% higher 3DMark score (5,454 versus 4,805)
4% lower power consumption (120W versus 125W)

Reasons to consider the Radeon Pro W5500

15% better value score (32 versus 27)
33% more VRAM: 8GB versus 6GB
$47 lower current price ($152 versus $199)

Value Score Comparison

Price-to-performance value analysis

GeForce GTX 1660
27
Radeon Pro W5500
+15% better value
32

Benchmarks

Performance comparison across 1 common benchmarks

3DMark synthetic

GeForce GTX 1660
+14%
5,454
Radeon Pro W5500
4,805

Technical Specifications

Side-by-side hardware comparison

Specification GeForce GTX 1660 Radeon Pro W5500
Architecture Turing RDNA
VRAM Size 6 GB 8 GB
TDP 120W 125W
Current Price $199
New • Amazon
$152
New • Amazon

Conclusion

But if raw gaming performance and future-proofing are more important – go for the GeForce GTX 1660. If you plan to game at higher resolutions or use VRAM-intensive applications, the Radeon Pro W5500 with 8GB VRAM provides more headroom. Both graphics cards have their strengths, so choose based on your specific gaming needs, budget constraints, and performance requirements.