Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE vs Ryzen 9 5900HS

AMD

Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE

8 Cores16 Thrd35 WWMax: 4.6 GHz2021

Popular choices:

VS
AMD

Ryzen 9 5900HS

8 Cores16 Thrd35 WWMax: 4.6 GHz2021

Popular choices:

Performance Spectrum - CPU

About PassMark

PassMark CPU Mark evaluates processor speed through complex mathematical computations. It provides a reliable metric to compare multi-core performance, where higher scores indicate faster processing for multitasking, gaming, and heavy workloads.

Head-to-Head Verdict, Benchmarks, Value & Long-Term Outlook

This comparison brings together gaming FPS, productivity performance, platform differences, power efficiency, pricing context, and upgrade path so you can see which CPU actually makes more sense.

Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE

2021

Why buy it

  • Better for gaming: +4.1% higher average FPS across 50 shared CPU benchmark tests.

Trade-offs

  • Lower PassMark (21,064 vs 21,214).
  • Launch MSRP is still $349 MSRP, while Ryzen 9 5900HS mostly shows up through inconsistent older-market listings.

Ryzen 9 5900HS

2021

Why buy it

  • +0.7% higher PassMark.

Trade-offs

  • Worse for gaming: lower average FPS than Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE across 50 shared CPU benchmark tests.

Quick Answers

So, is Ryzen 9 5900HS better than Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE?
It depends on what matters more to you. For gaming, Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE is ahead with a 4.1% average FPS lead across 50 shared CPU game tests in our data. For rendering, compiling, streaming, and heavier multitasking, Ryzen 9 5900HS pulls ahead with 0.7% better PassMark.
Which one is better for streaming, content creation, and heavy multitasking?
For streaming, content creation, and heavier multitasking, Ryzen 9 5900HS is the better fit. You are getting 0.7% better PassMark, backed by 8 cores and 16 threads.
Which one is the smarter buy today, not just the cheaper CPU?
Ryzen 9 5900HS is still the faster CPU overall, but Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE makes more sense if price matters more than absolute performance. Ryzen 9 5900HS is at an unclear MSRP at unclear MSRP versus $349 MSRP, and it gives you 0.7% better PassMark. The trade-off is that Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE is still the better pure gaming CPU with a 4.1% average FPS lead across 50 shared CPU game tests in our data. Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE is also 100.0% better value on MSRP (60.4 vs 0.0 PassMark/$), which is why it is easier to justify for price-conscious builds on paper.
Which one is more future-proof for 2026 and beyond?
Ryzen 9 5900HS is the more future-proof choice for 2026 and beyond. You are getting more multi-core headroom with 8 cores / 16 threads instead of 8/16. That extra compute headroom should age better as games, background tasks, and creator workloads get heavier.

Games Benchmarks

Paired with RTX 4090

To accurately isolate CPU performance, all benchmarks below use an NVIDIA RTX 4090 as the reference GPU. This eliminates GPU-side bottlenecks and highlights pure processing throughput differences between the CPUs.

Note: Real-world results may vary based on your actual GPU. CPU performance impact is more visible in processing-intensive titles and high-refresh-rate gaming scenarios.

Path of Exile 2

Path of Exile 2

PresetRyzen 7 PRO 5750GERyzen 9 5900HS
1080p
low176 FPS171 FPS
medium151 FPS149 FPS
high123 FPS121 FPS
ultra102 FPS100 FPS
1440p
low151 FPS146 FPS
medium126 FPS123 FPS
high101 FPS99 FPS
ultra85 FPS83 FPS
4K
low83 FPS79 FPS
medium75 FPS72 FPS
high60 FPS57 FPS
ultra47 FPS44 FPS
Counter-Strike 2

Counter-Strike 2

PresetRyzen 7 PRO 5750GERyzen 9 5900HS
1080p
low434 FPS411 FPS
medium367 FPS351 FPS
high320 FPS306 FPS
ultra284 FPS270 FPS
1440p
low375 FPS355 FPS
medium330 FPS315 FPS
high293 FPS280 FPS
ultra251 FPS239 FPS
4K
low258 FPS245 FPS
medium234 FPS223 FPS
high221 FPS211 FPS
ultra193 FPS183 FPS
League of Legends

League of Legends

PresetRyzen 7 PRO 5750GERyzen 9 5900HS
1080p
low527 FPS530 FPS
medium527 FPS530 FPS
high518 FPS530 FPS
ultra429 FPS496 FPS
1440p
low515 FPS530 FPS
medium440 FPS465 FPS
high395 FPS424 FPS
ultra327 FPS359 FPS
4K
low377 FPS400 FPS
medium318 FPS337 FPS
high280 FPS300 FPS
ultra220 FPS241 FPS
Valorant

Valorant

PresetRyzen 7 PRO 5750GERyzen 9 5900HS
1080p
low527 FPS530 FPS
medium527 FPS530 FPS
high527 FPS530 FPS
ultra527 FPS530 FPS
1440p
low527 FPS530 FPS
medium527 FPS530 FPS
high527 FPS530 FPS
ultra488 FPS516 FPS
4K
low517 FPS530 FPS
medium463 FPS478 FPS
high412 FPS427 FPS
ultra354 FPS373 FPS

Technical Specifications

Side-by-side comparison of Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE and Ryzen 9 5900HS

AMD

Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE

The Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE is manufactured by AMD. It was released in 1 June 2021 (4 years ago). It is based on the Cezanne (2021−2025) architecture. It features 8 cores and 16 threads. Base frequency is 3.2 GHz, with boost up to 4.6 GHz. L3 cache: 16 MB. L2 cache: 512K (per core). Built on 7 nm process technology. Socket: AM4. Thermal design power (TDP): 35 Watt. Memory support: DDR4-3200. Passmark benchmark score: 21,064 points. Launch price was $299.

AMD

Ryzen 9 5900HS

The Ryzen 9 5900HS is manufactured by AMD. It was released in 12 January 2021 (4 years ago). It is based on the Cezanne-HS (Zen 3) (2021) architecture. It features 8 cores and 16 threads. Base frequency is 3 GHz, with boost up to 4.6 GHz. L3 cache: 16 MB (total). L2 cache: 512 kB (per core). Built on 7 nm process technology. Socket: FP6. Thermal design power (TDP): 35 Watt. Memory support: DDR4. Passmark benchmark score: 21,214 points. Launch price was $299.

Processing Power

Both the Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE and Ryzen 9 5900HS share an identical 8-core/16-thread configuration. Boost clocks reach 4.6 GHz on the Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE versus 4.6 GHz on the Ryzen 9 5900HS — identical boost frequencies (base: 3.2 GHz vs 3 GHz). The Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE uses the Cezanne (2021−2025) architecture (7 nm), while the Ryzen 9 5900HS uses Cezanne-HS (Zen 3) (2021) (7 nm). In PassMark, the Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE scores 21,064 against the Ryzen 9 5900HS's 21,214 — a 0.7% lead for the Ryzen 9 5900HS. L3 cache: 16 MB on the Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE vs 16 MB (total) on the Ryzen 9 5900HS.

FeatureRyzen 7 PRO 5750GERyzen 9 5900HS
Cores / Threads
8 / 16
8 / 16
Boost Clock
4.6 GHz
4.6 GHz
Base Clock
3.2 GHz+7%
3 GHz
L3 Cache
16 MB
16 MB (total)
L2 Cache
512K (per core)
512 kB (per core)
Process
7 nm
7 nm
Architecture
Cezanne (2021−2025)
Cezanne-HS (Zen 3) (2021)
PassMark
21,064
21,214
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Memory & Platform

The Ryzen 7 PRO 5750GE uses the AM4 socket (PCIe 3.0), while the Ryzen 9 5900HS uses FP6 (PCIe 3.0) — making them incompatible on the same motherboard.

FeatureRyzen 7 PRO 5750GERyzen 9 5900HS
Socket
AM4
FP6
PCIe Generation
PCIe 3.0
PCIe 3.0