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Hardware Math

Is 750W Enough for an RTX 5070 Ti + Ryzen 7 9800X3D?

Last updated: 2026-07-07

Short answer

Yes. For an RTX 5070 Ti paired with a Ryzen 7 9800X3D at stock settings, a quality 750 W power supply is enough — it is exactly the comfortable tier our sizing math produces, and it matches NVIDIA's own guidance for the card.

Move to 850 W only if you plan to overclock, want the quietest possible fan behavior under sustained load, or intend to drop a higher-power GPU into the same system later.

The math

The estimate below assumes an ATX motherboard, two RAM sticks, one NVMe SSD, three case fans, and a USB peripherals allowance alongside the two headline parts.

GPU and CPU figures are vendor power limits (TGP and PPT) — conservative ceilings rather than typical gaming draw, which is usually lower for both parts.

Estimated load breakdown
Component Watts (est.) Note
GeForce RTX 5070 Ti (total graphics power) 300 Vendor TGP — needs verification
Ryzen 7 9800X3D (PPT ceiling) 162 Vendor PPT — needs verification
ATX motherboard 65
RAM, 2 sticks 10
NVMe SSD, 1 drive 8
Case fans, 3 9
USB peripherals allowance 25
Estimated peak load (sum) 579

Estimated peak system load: about 580 W.

The 1.1x floor gives roughly 640 W, rounding up to 650 W — technically workable on a high-quality unit, but tight. The standard 1.25x comfort margin gives roughly 725 W, which rounds up to exactly 750 W.

With light overclocking (1.35x) or a future-upgrade mindset (1.45x) the math moves to roughly 780-840 W, which rounds up to 850 W. That is the honest boundary: 750 W for stock use, 850 W for tuners and upgraders.

Who this fits

  • 750 W: this exact combo at stock settings, including PBO-style auto-boost, with a current-generation quality unit.
  • 850 W: the same combo with manual overclocking, or if your next GPU might be a 400 W-class card on the same PSU.

Who should size differently

  • A bargain-bin 750 W unit with no 16-pin cable and weak transient response — quality matters as much as the number on the label.
  • Systems with many drives, pump-heavy custom loops, or add-in cards — recalculate with your real parts list.
  • Extreme overclocking scenarios — this guide covers stock and light-tune use only.

Safety notes

  • Verify TGP, PPT, and PSU guidance on the official NVIDIA and AMD pages before buying — our data rows are marked as needing verification.
  • Use the native 12V-2x6 (16-pin) cable of an ATX 3.x PSU where possible, seat it fully, and avoid tight bends near the connector.
  • Never reuse modular cables from a different PSU model or brand.

Try it with your own parts

Plug your exact components into the calculator to see the recommendation for your build.

PSU Wattage Calculator

Frequently asked questions

Will a 650 W PSU work with an RTX 5070 Ti and a 9800X3D?

Our math puts the floor at about 640 W, so a top-quality 650 W ATX 3.x unit sits right on the line at stock settings. It can work, but there is little margin for aging, hot ambient temperatures, or overclocking, so we recommend 750 W for a new purchase.

Does the 9800X3D really draw 162 W in games?

Usually not — gaming draw is typically well below the PPT ceiling. We size against the ceiling because it is the vendor-published worst case, and worst cases (rendering, stress tests, background work while gaming) do happen.

Is an ATX 3.1 PSU required for this build?

Not required, but recommended for new purchases: ATX 3.x units are specified to handle modern GPU power excursions and ship with a native 16-pin cable, which removes the adapter from the equation.

Sources

Hardware entries marked this way use vendor-published limits that our team has not yet re-verified. Check the manufacturer's official spec page before making a purchase decision.