- Internet & Connectivity
The Complete Guide to Business Broadband in the UK
18 Mar, 2026
£1897.80 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
If you’re paying £1,581.50 ex‑VAT for an RTX PRO 4000 (Blackwell), you’d better be buying it for a specific workload. This is very much a “professional workstation” card: it’s for CAD/CAM, rendering, digital content creation, and any environment where GPU compute matters and you want stability and predictability over tinkering. If your teams are producing output (not just viewing models) and you’re seeing real slowdowns on current hardware, it can be a sensible upgrade—especially in businesses that value support, drivers, and qualified configs.
That said, it’s not a good deal for most general-purpose office deployments, light graphics, or anyone who just wants “something better for Windows.” For pure image-workflow or multi-monitor setups, you can almost always spend a lot less and get 90% of the day-to-day benefit. Also, £1.5k is only “worth it” if your software actually benefits from the class of GPU you’re buying—if your applications are mostly CPU-bound or you’re not running GPU-accelerated features, you may be paying for capability you won’t use. If you tell me what software your engineers use (and roughly how big the models/projects are), I can give a much clearer “buy / don’t buy” verdict.

Asus
ASUS PRIME GeForce RTX 5070 12GB - White OC Edition - graphics card - GeForce RTX 5070 - 12 GB GDDR7 - PCI Express 5.0 - 3 x DisplayPort, HDMI

Asus
PRIME-RX9070XT-O16G

HP
NVIDIA RTX 4500 Ada - Graphics card - RTX 4500 Ada - 24 GB GDDR6 - PCIe 4.0 x16 - 4 x DisplayPort

Asus
ASUS Dual GeForce RTX 5060 Ti 16GB - OC Edition - graphics card - GeForce RTX 5060 Ti - 16 GB GDDR7 - PCI Express 5.0 - 3 x DisplayPort, HDMI