NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super
Nvidia's high-end 1440p and entry 4K card, with 16GB of GDDR6X on a wider 256-bit bus and meaningfully more CUDA cores than the standard 4070 SUPER.
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Why we rate it
- 16GB VRAM on a 256-bit bus
- Strong entry 4K performance
- DLSS 3 with Frame Generation
- Excellent ray tracing for the tier
- Superseded by RTX 5070 Ti
- 285W TDP wants a decent PSU
Where the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super wins and loses
Specifications
General info
Memory
Compute units
Power
Design and cooling
Display outputs
More specs
Watch it in action
Is the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super right for you?
If you're driving a 1440p high-refresh monitor or stepping up to 4K, and you've found this card at a meaningful discount versus the 5070 Ti, it's a capable performer with strong DLSS 3 and RT credentials.
If you're building today and the 4070 Ti SUPER isn't substantially cheaper than the RTX 5070 Ti, the newer card is a smarter buy with DLSS 4 multi-frame generation and better performance per pound.
Before you buy
Yes, if you want the 16GB of VRAM and proper entry 4K headroom. The Ti SUPER's wider 256-bit bus and extra CUDA cores deliver meaningfully better performance at high resolutions, justifying the price premium.
For most current games at 4K with DLSS Quality, yes. The 16GB VRAM and 256-bit bus provide proper headroom. Native 4K ultra in the newest AAA titles can stretch it, but Frame Generation closes the gap.
The 5070 Ti is meaningfully faster, uses GDDR7 memory, and supports DLSS 4 multi-frame generation. Unless the 4070 Ti SUPER is substantially cheaper, the 5070 Ti is the smarter buy if you're building today.
Nvidia recommends 700W and that's the realistic floor. With a power-hungry CPU like a Core i9 or Ryzen 9, step up to a quality 850W unit. The 12VHPWR connector needs proper handling too.
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