The RTX 4060 is based on NVIDIA Ada Lovelace architecture, while the RTX 5060 uses the newer NVIDIA Blackwell architecture
The RTX 5060 has 3840 CUDA cores, compared to 3072 in the RTX 4060, offering more parallel processing power
The RTX 4060 uses GDDR6 memory, while the RTX 5060 upgrades to GDDR7, providing significantly higher memory bandwidth (448 GB/s vs. 272 GB/s)
The RTX 5060 includes 120 fifth-generation Tensor Cores, optimized for AI performance, compared to 96 in the RTX 4060
The RTX 4060 supports DLSS 3, while the RTX 5060 introduces DLSS 4 with enhanced Ray Reconstruction, Multi Frame Generation, and improved AI-driven performance
The RTX 4060 supports PCIe 4.0 x8, while the RTX 5060 upgrades to PCIe 5.0 x8 for faster data transfer
The RTX 5060 has a higher TDP of 145W compared to 115W for the RTX 4060, reflecting its increased performance capabilities
The RTX 5060 accelerates creative workflows with NVIDIA Studio, ninth-generation NVENC, and AI tools like NVIDIA ACE and RTX Video
The RTX 5060 offers advancements in memory, ray tracing, AI, and PCIe interface, making it a more future-proof option compared to the RTX 4060
The RTX 5060 features 30 fourth-generation Ray Tracing Cores, compared to 24 third-generation cores in the RTX 4060, enabling better ray tracing performance