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Intel's 5.7 GHz Xeon 6377P features 12 P-cores and a desktop-class LGA1700 socket — unusual server CPU prioritizes clock speed over core count

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Intel has published specifications for the Xeon 6377P, a 12-core server processor that pairs enterprise-grade features with clock speeds more commonly associated with high-end desktop CPUs. According to Intel's product database, the chip, based on Bartlett Lake silicon, has a recommended price of $1,045 and is scheduled to launch in Q2 2026. The 6377P is also notable as the first P-core-only processor Intel has placed in its enterprise Xeon lineup.

The Xeon 6377P appears to be an unusual addition to Intel's server lineup. While modern Xeon processors typically emphasize high core counts, large memory capacities, and extensive I/O connectivity, the new chip instead prioritizes frequency, boosting up to 5.7 GHz while maintaining a relatively modest 95W TDP.

Swipe to scroll horizontally Intel Xeon 6377P specifications Specification Value Cores / Threads 12 / 24 Base Frequency 3.1 GHz Max Turbo Frequency 5.7 GHz Cache 36 MB TDP 95W Memory DDR5-4800, dual-channel, 128 GB max PCIe Gen 5, up to 20 lanes Socket LGA1700

Based on the specifications, the chip looks quite different from what most buyers expect from an Xeon. Dual-channel memory, a 128 GB capacity ceiling, 20 PCIe 5.0 lanes, and single-socket-only support are all constraints that would be unremarkable on a workstation processor but stand out on a $1,045 server part.

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Intel's Xeon 6 lineup normally spans the high-core-count Granite Rapids P-core parts and the 288-E-core Clearwater Forest and Sierra Forest parts. Dropping a 12-core Bartlett Lake die — basically a desktop CPU with ECC support and a server product code — into this family appears to be a deliberate choice to address single-socket, entry-level server deployments where raw core count matters less than per-core performance and platform familiarity.

One standout number is the 5.7 GHz maximum turbo — unusually high for server silicon, where power efficiency and core density typically dominate the conversation. The 95W TDP — genuinely low for a $1,045 server chip — makes that figure even more impressive.

Now, not every enterprise workload needs dozens of cores. Electronic design automation, CAD, software compilation, financial modeling, and certain industrial control workloads are often bottlenecked by single-threaded or lightly threaded performance. For those use cases, a 5.7 GHz Xeon with ECC memory, PCIe 5.0, platform validation, and guaranteed long-term availability is a more targeted fit than a 64-core EPYC with slower per-core clocks.

On the other hand, the competitive picture is less flattering. AMD's EPYC 4005 series, built on Zen 5, targets the same single-socket entry-level segment at lower price points and with a newer architecture. The earlier EPYC 4004 series topped out at 16 cores on AM5 — more cores than the 6377P at a lower RCP. Intel's counter-argument may be per-core performance and the existing LGA1700 platform ecosystem. However, the chip's AVX2-only instruction set, with no AVX-512 support, may give pause to workloads that can use wider vector operations — a notable omission at this price.

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