These are the best graphics cards to buy today… we know because we’re tested them all. The GPU is the silicon heart of your gaming PC and we’ve reviewed and benchmarked all the latest AMD and Nvidia graphics cards to come to our decision. But should you go for a cheap graphics card or go all in for 4K? We can help.

If you want the absolute pinnacle of graphical prowess you could drop a cool $2,500 on Nvidia’s Titan RTX, but now that the RTX 2080 Ti is finally here, serious 4K performance is actually within reach. I mean yes, it is some $1,200, but that’s less than half the price of a Titan RTX. Bargain, right?

But, if you can’t drop four figures on a GPU, what should you buy right now? Older Nvidia graphics cards are starting to creep up in price in the short-term, now that Nvidia’s Turing architecture, and subsequent RTX 2080, RTX 2080 Ti have been released. But the more mainstream RTX 2070 is finally available on the shelves at least, and the RTX 2060 has also been released. Plus AMD’s RX 580 and RX 570 cards are finally a bit of a bargain too.

So whether you’re chasing a good, cheap graphics card, a top-end 4K graphics card, or just simply the overall best graphics card, then we’ve got you covered.

WINNER: BEST GRAPHICS CARD

AMD RX 580 8GB
Approx. – $193 | £195

Pros
Tick Large video memory capacity
Tick Great price/performance ratio
Tick Quality DirectX 12 performance

Cons
Cross The GTX 1060 6GB is sometimes faster


Until there are truly affordable next-gen mainstream Turing GPUs in play the price/performance hero will remain the AMD RX 580. And, for us, that makes it the overall best graphics card. Pricing has returned to a vaguely sensible level where the RX 580 8GB is once more the cheaper option, and the go-to card for non-billionaire PC gamers.

The Polaris-based Radeon cards perform better than the GTX 1060 competition in a handful of DX12 titles and in Doom’s Vulkan build. They have a superior memory setup, too. Not only does the RX 580 have an extra 2GB of VRAM at its disposal, useful for high-res textures and large open-world games, it’s also got that running over a wider, 256-bit, aggregated memory bus.

RUNNER-UP

NVIDIA RTX 2060
Approx. – $350 | £325

Pros
Tick Runs cooler than the Jamaican bobsled team
Tick GTX 1070 Ti performance
Tick Cheaper than a GTX 1070

Cons
Cross Arguably not a mainstream card


If you’re looking for more than the RX 580 can offer, the landscape is rather barren until you reach the realm of the RTX 2060. Okay, there’s the RX Vega duo, but with the more-recent Turing architecture taking centre stage we reckon your best bet is to throw your dollar down on the cheapest RTX card of the lot.

Utilising an only slightly truncated TU106 GPU, the RTX 2060 easily outpaces the equally CUDA equipped GTX 1070 across our gaming benchmarking suite. So much so, in fact, it matches even the GTX 1070 Ti in regular ol’ rendering. And with enough RT Cores and Tensor Cores to keep ray tracing chugging over, the RTX 2060 is both a graphics card for the present and the future.

RUNNER-UP

AMD RX 590
Approx. – $280 | £234

Pros
Tick Most powerful sub-$300 GPU
Tick Tops the GTX 1060 6GB
Tick Quality DirectX 12 performance

Cons
Cross The RX 580 is still better value for money


The RX 590 isn’t all that different to our pick for the best graphics card, the RX 580. AMD has copy and pasted its 36 CU GPU onto either GlobalFoundries 12nm or Samsung’s 11nm process, resulting in significantly higher clock speeds over its predecessor. It’s not a hugely impactful change when it comes to gaming performance, but AMD has tweaked the formula just enough to earn the RX 590 the title of most powerful sub-$300 graphics card.

That said, it’s not the card we’d recommend in the mainstream GPU segment. One of the best things the RX 590 has done for the market is make the RX 580 just that much more tantalising with its sub-MSRP prices right now. Still, if you want the newest silicon, the RX 590, in various third-party garb, is the fastest going without needing to break the bank.

RUNNER-UP

NVIDIA GTX 1060 6GB
Approx. – $200 | £228

Pros
Tick Great gaming performance
Tick GeForce Experience backend
Tick Quality legacy DX 11 frame rates

Cons
Cross Not so great in Vulkan and DX12


We still haven’t got genuinely mainstream Nvidia Turing graphics cards on the market. The RTX 2070 costs at least $499 for the reference chip, and the RTX 2060 costs $349. Neither are necessarily competing for gamers on a budget. So until these get cheaper, or something new fills that gap, the graphics card we recommend for the vast majority of PC gamers is either the GTX 1060 or the RX 580.

AMD’s RX 580 has just pipped the GTX 1060 as the best graphics card at the moment, thanks to its improved framebuffer, lower price tag, and better performance in modern APIs. But if you love yourself some Nvidia features – G-Sync, GeForce Experience, Shield’s GameStream, and the like – then the GTX 1060 6GB is still an absolutely brilliant gaming GPU.

WINNER: BEST 4K GRAPHICS CARD

NVIDIA RTX 2080 TI
Approx. – $1,199 | £1,099

Pros
TickSerious 60fps 4K gaming
Tick Faster than a $3K Titan V
Tick Future ray tracing and AI goodness

Cons
Cross Old-school Titan-level pricing


The RTX 2080 Ti is the true next-gen graphics card of the new Turing GPU generation and, if pure performance was king, it would be an easy pick for the best graphics card. The RTX 2080 only delivers current gaming performance at the same level as the GTX 1080 Ti, but the RTX 2080 Ti goes well beyond it, offering genuine 4K gaming at 60fps in all but the most demanding of PC games.

There’s also the promise of real-time ray tracing… when Microsoft updates its Windows 10 OS with a new version of DirectX 12. Then there’s AI-based super-sampling that will make your games look prettier and run better. As well as all the other goodness AI will bring to gaming in the future via Microsoft’s WinML API, and the new shader techniques Nvidia has created for Turing. Buy it if you want the ultimate in 4K gaming now, and then bask in the knowledge there’s even more to come.

RUNNER-UP

NVIDIA RTX 2080
Approx. – $755 | £640

Pros
Tick Outperforms the GTX 1080 Ti
Tick Future ray tracing and AI power…

Cons
Cross … but we’re still waiting for it
Cross Super-expensive for a 2nd tier GPU


The second-tier 20-series GPU from Nvidia is still a massively expensive card and yet is only delivering a little more performance than the previous generation’s GTX 1080 Ti – the old best graphics card for 4K gaming. But stock of the top Pascal GPU has dwindled to such a point you can’t pick them up for less than the cost of the RTX 2080 Ti… so that idea’s pretty much out.

And there is more to come from the RTX 2080, and we’re confident it will eventually deliver on Nvidia’s fresh fine wine approach. For now, though, with few affordable reference card versions, it’s a tough sell. But as prices for the GTX 1080 Ti go up as stock volume goes down, and the reverse happens to the RTX 2080, it is fast becoming the go-to card compared to the Pascal GPU.

RUNNER-UP

NVIDIA RTX 2070
Approx. – $500 | £450

Pros
Tick Faster than a GTX 1080
Tick Entry level for ray tracing

Cons
Cross Overclocked cards aren’t really worth it
Cross It’s a 3rd tier GPU for $500…


Nvidia’s third-tier Turing GPU is a really impressive graphics card, it’s just a shame that it’s arrived at GTX 1080 pricing rather than at the old GTX 1070 level. But it does outperform the old Pascal cards, and gets mighty close to the 1080 Ti when you throw some serious overclocking its way. But those factory-overclocked cards are hard to recommend given their super-high pricing.

We still don’t know what the real-time ray tracing and AI processing will eventually offer, but the RTX 2070 does seemingly represent the cheapest entry point if you want to get in at the ground floor of the new tech without necessarily having to hope DLSS comes to the rescue.

WINNER: BEST CHEAP GRAPHICS CARD

AMD RX 570
Approx. – $160 | £138

Pros
Tick Finally a great price
Tick Serious 1080p performance
Tick Wider memory bus than 1050 Ti

Cons
Cross The RX 580 is only a little bit more


The RX 570 is finally at a non-ridiculous price now that stock has filtered back into the channel. Actually, with the card sitting cheaper than the Nvidia GTX 1050 Ti at the moment, it is actually a kind of ridiculous price… in a good way. Even at its standard sub-$200 level it’s not a bad option as the best graphics card for those on a budget.

You are missing out on the higher level of video memory you get with the 8GB version of the RX 580 or the GTX 1060 6GB, but 4GB is absolutely fine if you’re still rocking a 1080p monitor. With its only slightly cut-down Polaris 20 GPU it’s still got the gaming goods, and if you can’t stretch to the price of an RX 580 or GTX 1060 then the second-tier Polaris card won’t disappoint.

RUNNER-UP

NVIDIA GTX 1050 TI
Approx. – $170 | £154

Pros
Tick Great 1080p gaming performance
Tick Bargain price
Tick Doesn’t need a PSU connection

Cons
Cross 4GB VRAM might become restrictive


The Nvidia GTX 1050 Ti is a fantastic little card; a welcome surprise given just how capable the GP107 GPU is when dealing with the latest games running at their highest 1080p settings. With seriously GPU-taxing titles you’ll need to knock back your in-game graphics settings a touch, but for something like Grand Theft Auto V you can hit just under 60fps comfortably.

Where the GTX 1050 Ti really stands out is in opening up PC gaming to a wider audience. Because its efficient GPU draws all its power from the PCIe bus, without needing an extra connection from the PSU, it can be an instant upgrade for any off-the-shelf office PC. You can turn pretty much any ropey old PC from the last five years or so into a 1080p gaming machine to be proud of. You can’t ask much more than that.

Not everyone is lucky enough to be totally weapons free on budget when it comes to the most important component in a gaming PC: the graphics card. That’s why picking the best graphics card for your needs is so important – if you can’t afford an RTX 2080 Ti you still need to make sure your money is well-placed in hardware that is going to deliver the best performance for your given budget.

While the RTX 2080 Ti is the boss of 4K gaming, the GTX 1060 and RX 580 are fighting it out for the all-important best graphics card price/performance crown. The RX 580 is a little cheaper right now, so it just about noses ahead right now, however, both offer fantastic frame rates even when the settings are cranked up to the max, and you won’t be left high and dry with either Nvidia or AMD in your system.

The entry-level is almost entirely dominated by the green team, however. The GTX 1050 Ti is a great card for middling performance in AAA titles, and fantastic performance in some of the most popular, and less demanding, competitive games around. Perfect for Fortnite on a budget.

But the RX 570 4GB is starting to drop down to a price that makes it almost the same price point as the 1050 Ti. It’s sporting the same VRAM capacity, but has a much wider memory bus, and higher gaming performance too.