Nvidia GeForce RTX 2070

Those of you coming from GTX 10 series cards have no reason to upgrade unless budget has no meaning and you're spending the big bucks on today's alpha GPU, the RTX 2080 Ti.
– As reviewed by TechSpot on Oct 2018
Turing
Architecture
High-end
Product Tier
2304
Shader Cores
64
ROPs
144
TMUs
36
RT Cores
8 GB
Memory
GDDR6
Memory Type
448 GB/s
Bandwidth
175 W
TDP
$675
Price
GPU Snapshot
Release date:Oct 17, 2018Price at Launch:$499
Type:DesktopArchitecture:Turing
Generation:RTX 20 seriesProduct Tier:High-end
VRAM Capacity:8 GBTotal Board Power:175 W
Core Configuration
Shader Cores:2304TMUs:144
ROPs:64L2 Cache:4 MB
Memory
VRAM Capacity:8 GBMemory Type:GDDR6
Memory Speed:14 GbpsMemory Bus:256-bit
Bandwidth:448 GB/s
Graphics Processing
Base Clock:1.41 GHzBoost Clock:1.62 GHz
FP32 Throughput:7.5 TFLOPsRay Tracing:Yes
Ray Tracing Cores:36Process Size:12nm
Process Name:TSMC 12FFNDie Size:445 mm²
Power & Connectivity
Total Board Power:175 WPower Connectors:1x 8-pin
Bus Interface:PCIe 3.0 x16HDMI Support:HDMI 2.0
DisplayPort Support:DP 1.4aDSC:No
Max Displays:4
Media & Software Support
DirectX Support:12 UltimateShader Model:6.8
Vulkan Version:1.4OpenGL Version:4.6

GPU Benchmarks

GPU benchmark scores are aggregated from dozens of tests conducted in TechSpot's labs, compiled from our full library of GPU reviews and gaming benchmarks. Scores are normalized to a shared baseline and organized by resolution, covering rasterized workloads exclusively. Ray tracing and upscaling technologies are disabled to guarantee consistent, like-for-like comparisons.

[GPU] 1080p Gaming

[GPU] 1440p Gaming

[GPU] 4K Gaming

Price History

Nvidia GeForce RTX 2070 pricing

Price Date
Current $675 Feb 2, 2026
Highest* $755 May 16, 2025
Lowest* $639 May 14, 2025
Average $692
* Prices are based on listings from Newegg and other major retailers over the past 12+ months.
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Reviews and Ratings

85

Average Score

Based on 16 reviews

9.2

User Score

Based on 1,152 reviews

Reviewers Liked

  • Faster than GeForce GTX 1080
  • Founders Edition is beautifully designed
  • Great 1440p and entry-level 4K gaming performance
  • Surprisingly lower energy consumption
  • All the Turing features
  • Great design

Reviewers Didn't Like

  • No SLI option
  • Jump in generational pricing
  • Minor upgrade over the 1080
  • Expensive for a 'mid-range' GPU
70

Those of you coming from GTX 10 series cards have no reason to upgrade unless budget has no meaning and you're spending the big bucks on today's alpha GPU, the RTX 2080 Ti.

By TechSpot on
80

The RTX 2070, in its stock-clocked reference trim, is a great little graphics card. It's done its job of topping the GTX 1080, and with the sub-$500 versions you are getting a whole lot of bang for your buck and the potential for a ray traced future.

By pcgamesn.com on
90

If you already own a GTX 1080 or the 1080 Ti, then the RTX 2070 might not be the right upgrade, as the performance of the RTX 2070 is similar to the GTX 1080. However, if you own a GTX 1060 or a 1070 GPU, the RTX 2070 could be a nice upgrade, which can offer 4K gaming without any tussle.

By gizbot.com on
86

The 2070 is a powerful card and if you look at value based on what previous gen cards launched at 1080 which this is slightly better than, then we can say its not a bad deal but we must assess it as the XX70 model that it is which means we must consider the 1070 MSRP/Launch price of $379. At 599.99 for the founders edition, it’s rough, going for the base model it drops to 499.99 but with that, the performance is unknown until we get hands-on time with one.

By bjorn3d.com on
80

Without mind-blowing performance or any actual ray tracing-enabled games, there aren’t enough reasons to spend this much on a Nvidia RTX 2070 yet.

By TechRadar on
76

I'm scoring the RTX 2070 Founders Edition as it performs today, on the games we're currently playing, and factoring in the Founders Edition pricing. Long-term, DLSS and ray tracing could make it a far more interesting card, but unless you're already planning a new PC build, I'd hold off on the RTX 2070. Even if you do want an RTX 2070, a different model is almost certainly a better value.

By PCGamer on
80

The Nvidia GeForce RTX 2070 Founders Edition packs futuristic hardware for ray tracing and AI-enhanced graphics, but it's also faster than the competition in traditional games. Nvidia's design is gorgeous, but similar performance can be achieved with lower-priced RTX 2070 graphics cards.

By PCWorld on
96

NVIDIA's new GeForce RTX 2070 offers performance somewhere between the GeForce GTX 1080 and GTX 1080 Ti, all in a single 8-pin PCIe power connector. There's plenty of fun to be had for a card starting at $499, blowing everything AMD has away with the third-fastest Turing card from NVIDIA.

By TweakTown on
86

The RTX 2070 Founder’s Edition is currently as close to a “value” proposition as you’re going to find with a Turing-based card. If you’re using a 1440p monitor and looking for a future-proof GPU, this card is a semi-affordable option with great looks and great performance. Still, you should wait for partner cards to drop in the future, as they should offer equivalent performance at a lower price.

By IGN on
85

Should you get the GeForce RTX 2070? If you own a GeForce GTX 1070 or below, you'll see a pretty nice performance boost. The GeForce RTX 2070 also has me looking forward to NVIDIA's true mainstream card, which is presumably called the GeForce RTX 2060. Turing may be expensive, but there's no denying that it serves up some sweet, sweet performance.

By hardwarezone.com.sg on
86

As is the case with all RTX-based cards, the RTX 2070 will—eventually—offer compatibility with real-time ray tracing and Deep Learning Super-Sampling (DLSS) thanks to its new Turing architecture. Ray tracing allows game developers to create more...

By in.ign.com on
70

Nvidia's GeForce RTX 2070 is another well-built graphics card that offers notably higher frame rates than GeForce GTX 1080. However, it's still intended for gaming at 2560x1440, and a $600 price tag is awfully expensive for smooth QHD performance. Third-party versions will almost assuredly offer much better value, albeit at lower clock rates.

By Tom's Hardware UK on

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