TDP

Updated: 06/06/2021 by Computer Hope
Illustration of TDP in a CPU

TDP (Thermal Design Power or thermal design point) measures how much heat is generated by electronic hardware, such as a CPU (Central Processing Unit). For example, a CPU cooler rated for 65 W TDP can dissipate the heat generated by 65 watts of electricity. TDP rating indicates how much power is required by an individual computer component.

TDP ratings may vary depending on the hardware manufacturer. Therefore, the TDP listed by one manufacturer may not compare exactly to that of another.

What does TDP indicate?

In the same generation of processors, those of a higher frequency generally use more power and have a higher TDP. Other factors affect how much power a CPU uses, including its number of cores and the onboard memory cache size.

However, TDP does not necessarily correlate to performance. Dennard scaling dictates that as circuitry becomes smaller, it becomes more efficient, consuming less power while achieving greater performance. For this reason, processors fabricated with a smaller process node (and therefore smaller transistors) may be more powerful than those with a higher TDP.

A rule of thumb is that a CPU with a higher TDP than another is either more powerful, less efficient, or both.

Why is TDP important?

If you are building a computer system, two of the most important factors are power and cooling. The PSU (Power Supply Unit) must provide adequate power for all system components, and the computer's heat must be adequately removed.

When choosing a PSU, find the specifications for all computer hardware, including motherboard, RAM (Random-Access Memory), CPU, GPU (Graphics Processing Unit), and disk drives, and add the TDP of each. The total TDP, measured in watts, represents the power your PSU must provide. Ensure you install a PSU rated to provide at least that many watts of power, plus about 100 watts, to account for variance in TDP ratings and real-world usage. If you plan to add hardware to the computer later, budget for that expected increase in TDP when choosing your PSU.

For each component that requires passive or active cooling, ensure that its cooler is rated to dissipate the same or greater TDP than the component. So, if your CPU has a TDP of 65 watts, ensure its heat sink and fan are rated to dissipate at least that much heat. The same is true if you are using a liquid cooling system.

TDP examples

For comparison, the following lists different CPUs, their TDP, frequencies, number of cores, onboard cache, fabrication process, device type, and price.

CPU TDP Freq (base, max) Cores L1, L2, L3 cache fabrication Device type Retail price
AMD Threadripper 2990WX 250 W 3.0, 4.2 GHz 32 3, 16, 64 MB 12 nm Servers, workstations $1799
Intel i9-9900K 95 W 3.6, 5.0 GHz 8 512 KB, 2, 16 MB 14 nm High-end desktop $499
Intel i9-8950 HK 45 W 2.9, 4.6 GHz 6 384 KB, 1.5, 12 MB 14 nm High-end laptop $583
Qualcomm Kryo 485 5 W 1.8, 2.8 GHz 8 n/a, 512 KB, 5 MB 7 nm High-end smartphone n/a

AMD Threadripper, Computer abbreviations, CPU terms, Electronics terms, Hardware terms, Intel Core i9, TLA