Reworded Article

Despite having the largest GB202 configuration to date, with 24,064 CUDA cores spread across 188 streaming multiprocessors running at speeds up to 2,617 MHz, and equipped with 96 GB of GDDR7 ECC memory, NVIDIA's RTX PRO 6000 'Blackwell' GPU has not yet been given an official release date or pricing information. Early listings from European retailers show the card starting at €8,982, including 21 percent VAT. Some vendors are asking for over €10,900. However, business customers looking at net costs may see significant savings, with an estimated cost of €7,430 before taxes, depending on local tax laws and import fees. NVIDIA is expected to offer the RTX PRO 6000 in various versions, including Workstation, Server, and Max-Q editions that are tailored to different professional settings in terms of power consumption and cooling designs.

In Japan, pre-release listings have priced the RTX PRO 6000 at ¥1,630,600 (approximately $11,326), indicating a similar premium level. The appearance of these price tags suggests that initial shipments have quietly made their way to distributors before any official announcement. One Redditor has even managed to get their hands on it early for a trial run. However, until NVIDIA releases RTX PRO-optimized drivers, the performance may not match up to the gaming GeForce RTX 5090 SKU. Designed for enterprise workstations and professional tasks that require high memory capacity and significant computing power, this pricing sets the RTX PRO 6000 apart from gaming-grade SKUs. Nevertheless, it is priced lower than the server-grade GB200-based Blackwell GPUs intended for AI and HPC workloads.