- Internet & Connectivity
How to Set Up Quality of Service for Business Applications
18 Mar, 2026







£526.18 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
At £441 ex-VAT, an ASUS Prime-branded RTX 5060 Ti with 8 GB is a pretty “it depends” purchase. If you’re building or upgrading office-adjacent systems that also need reliable GPU acceleration (AEC, light AI workflows, video work, VMs with GPU passthrough), the Prime line is a sensible choice: ASUS boards tend to be stable in business environments, and you’re paying more for build consistency than for flashy extras. But this is still an 8 GB class card, so if your workloads are heavy on high-resolution textures, large model sizes, or you expect to reuse the GPU for a few refresh cycles, the memory ceiling will show up faster than you’d like.
I’d steer most buyers toward it only if you’ve got clear, near-term workloads that won’t punish the memory limit—think “current projects, not future-proofing” and users who want a dependable GPU without going much higher in price. If you’re buying for gaming fleets or teams that live in modern AAA titles at higher settings, or if you’re trying to maximise resale/value longevity, I’d be cautious: at this price, you want either more headroom (more memory/stronger uplift) or a sharper deal. If you tell me your typical use case (software + resolution + number of users/workstations), I can say whether this is genuinely good value for *your* stack or a cost trap.

Asus
RS720-E11-RS24U/10G/2.6KW/24NVMe/OCP/GPU

Asus
ASUS TUF Gaming GeForce RTX 5060 Ti 8GB - OC Edition - graphics card - GeForce RTX 5060 Ti - 8 GB GDDR7 - PCI Express 5.0 - 3 x DisplayPort, HDMI

Asus
PRIME-RX9070XT-O16G

Asus
DUAL-RX9060XT-16G-WHITE