Buying a 1440p graphics card is where PC shopping gets pleasantly dangerous. The product names look close, the prices move by the week, and one overexcited checkout click can turn a sensible upgrade into a card your monitor barely uses.
The short version: open the RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 first if you want the most sensible 1440p value path, then compare RTX 5070 Ti or RTX 5070 when NVIDIA features are part of the reason you are upgrading. The RTX 4070 Ti Super is still a good GPU, but only as a discounted used, open-box, or clearance opportunity. If it is priced like a cleaner current-gen card, let it go.
Use the guide like a checkout workflow, not a permanent leaderboard. Start with the editor’s shortlist below, match it to your monitor and games, compare the real product-page price, check power and case fit, then decide whether NVIDIA features or AMD value matter more for the machine you are actually building. If you are still on a 1080p monitor or comparing cheaper AMD, NVIDIA and used-GPU options, start with the separate 1080p graphics-card guide instead.
Editor’s Picks: The GPUs I Would Open First
If I were shopping for a 1440p card in this class, I would not start with a giant benchmark chart. I would start with these lanes, because they map to the mistakes people actually make at checkout: paying too much for features they will not use, buying too little VRAM for a long upgrade cycle, or trusting an old-stock listing because the GPU name still sounds strong.

Radeon RX 9070 XT
The 1440p high-refresh value lane when it stays clearly below RTX 5070 Ti pricing and near RTX 5070 money.
- 16GB GDDR6
- 304W board power
- 750W PSU recommendation
- Two 8-pin connectors
- Value-first 1440p

Radeon RX 9070
The calmer 16GB starting point for 1440p 60-100Hz and budget-aware builds.
- 16GB GDDR6
- 220W board power
- 650W PSU recommendation
- Two 8-pin connectors
- Lower heat/power lane

GeForce RTX 5070 Ti
The NVIDIA-feature pick for 1440p high-refresh, ultrawide, ray tracing, creator overlap, and 16GB VRAM.
- 16GB GDDR7
- 300W total graphics power
- 750W system power recommendation
- PCIe Gen 5 cable or adapter
- DLSS/CUDA/NVENC

GeForce RTX 5070
A lower-cost NVIDIA route only when the 12GB tradeoff and final price make sense.
- 12GB GDDR7
- 250W total graphics power
- 650W system power recommendation
- NVIDIA feature stack
- Price-sensitive
GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super
Still a capable 16GB 1440p GPU, but only when clearance, used, or open-box pricing pays for the risk.
- 16GB GDDR6X
- Previous-gen card
- Seller/warranty sensitive
- Adapter/cable check
- Discount required
These cards still need exact product-page checks because partner-card coolers, lengths, power connectors, warranty terms and live prices change by model. The AMD and NVIDIA images above are official product/family visuals for orientation; they are not Price2Click hands-on test units, benchmark proof or endorsements of a specific partner board.
This is the recommendation layer. The monitor section below is the sanity check. If you only have a 1440p 75Hz display, you probably do not need to climb the stack. If you play ray-traced single-player games, stream, edit video, or use CUDA-heavy apps, the NVIDIA premium may make sense. If you mostly want fast rasterized gaming for the money, AMD should get the first price check.
Start With The Monitor, Not The Model Number
Use this as the second pass after the editor’s shortlist. Pick the row that matches the screen you actually use, then jump to the detailed GPU section before opening store tabs.
Choose For Your Monitor First
1440p 60-100Hz
This is the easiest use case to overspend on. A value-focused 16GB card such as the RX 9070 is the first lane to check if the live price stays meaningfully below stronger 16GB cards. The RTX 5070 can also make sense when NVIDIA features matter, but the 12GB VRAM limit means it should win on feature fit or price, not on blind “best GPU” logic.
1440p 144-180Hz
This is the sweet spot for most 1440p GPU shoppers. The RX 9070 XT is the value-first card to check when it lands near RTX 5070 money or stays well below RTX 5070 Ti pricing. The RTX 5070 Ti is the NVIDIA-feature answer, but it needs a buyer who will actually use DLSS, ray tracing, CUDA/creator acceleration, or NVIDIA’s broader software stack enough to justify the visible price gap.
1440p 240Hz Esports
For esports, the GPU is only part of the story. CPU choice, game settings, memory, and latency matter too. An RTX 5070, RX 9070, RX 9070 XT, or RTX 5070 Ti can all be reasonable depending on the title and settings. Do not buy a more expensive GPU only because a listing or marketing page highlights generated frames; prioritize strong base performance and a balanced system.
1440p Ultrawide
Ultrawide 1440p pushes more pixels than standard 2560x1440, so 16GB VRAM becomes easier to justify. Start with RX 9070 XT for value or RTX 5070 Ti for NVIDIA features. Be more cautious with 12GB cards if you expect newer AAA games, high textures, heavy ray tracing, or a long upgrade cycle.
1440p Plus Occasional 4K
If you also connect to a 4K TV or plan to move to a 4K monitor, widen the shortlist. RX 9070 XT and RTX 5070 Ti remain sensible upper-midrange options, while RTX 5080 becomes a legitimate premium option for 4K spillover, heavy ray tracing, or creator workloads. For a 1440p-only monitor, RTX 5080 is usually an upper-bound reference, not the default answer.
Best 1440p GPUs By Buyer Type
Radeon RX 9070: Best Value Starting Point
The RX 9070 is the first card to check for a practical 1440p build if the final product-page price stays meaningfully below the stronger RX 9070 XT. AMD’s reference information lists 16GB of GDDR6 on a 256-bit bus, 220W board power, a 650W recommended PSU, and two 8-pin power connectors.
Why it works:
- 16GB VRAM gives it more 1440p headroom than many cheaper cards.
- Power and PSU requirements are easier to fit than higher-end cards.
- It avoids paying for premium ray tracing or creator features a buyer may not use.
Do not buy it if:
- RX 9070 XT pricing is close enough that the upgrade makes sense.
- You strongly prefer NVIDIA’s DLSS, ray tracing behavior, NVENC/CUDA, or app support.
- The exact model has weak cooling, poor return terms, or a price inflated above stronger alternatives.
Radeon RX 9070 XT: Best 1440p High-Refresh Value
The RX 9070 XT is the value-first high-refresh 1440p pick when it stays well below RTX 5070 Ti pricing. AMD lists 16GB GDDR6, 304W board power, a 750W recommended PSU, and two 8-pin power connectors. The shopping logic is simple: when an RX 9070 XT drops close to RTX 5070 money, it becomes hard to justify paying much more unless you specifically need NVIDIA’s feature stack.
Why it works:
- It is a better fit for 1440p 144-180Hz monitors than a strict entry card.
- 16GB VRAM is safer for newer games, higher textures, and a longer hold.
- It is the card to check first when you care more about price/performance than NVIDIA-only features.
Do not buy it if:
- It drifts close to RTX 5070 Ti pricing.
- Your main games lean heavily on ray tracing where NVIDIA is the safer feature bet.
- Your exact build cannot comfortably handle the board size, airflow, or 750W PSU recommendation.
Where I would check RX 9070 / RX 9070 XT pricing
GeForce RTX 5070: NVIDIA Features With A 12GB Caveat
The RTX 5070 is the NVIDIA-feature lane for buyers who want DLSS, ray tracing support, NVIDIA app compatibility, or creator features without jumping to RTX 5070 Ti prices. NVIDIA lists 12GB GDDR7, 250W total graphics power, a 650W system power recommendation, and either a 2x PCIe 8-pin adapter or a 300W-or-greater PCIe Gen 5 cable depending on card/cable setup.
Why it works:
- It can be a lower-cost NVIDIA entry point when prices sit in the low-$600s to low-$700s.
- DLSS and NVIDIA’s software ecosystem matter in many games and creator workflows.
- Power requirements are lower than RTX 5070 Ti and RTX 5080.
Do not buy it if:
- You want a long-hold card for heavy AAA textures, ultrawide 1440p, or more VRAM headroom.
- It costs too close to RX 9070 XT or RTX 5070 Ti.
- You are choosing it only because the model number is newer.
GeForce RTX 5070 Ti: Best NVIDIA 1440p Card If The Price Makes Sense
The RTX 5070 Ti is the stronger NVIDIA feature path for 1440p because it pairs the NVIDIA feature stack with 16GB GDDR7. NVIDIA lists 300W total graphics power, a 750W system power recommendation, and either a 2x PCIe 8-pin adapter or a 300W-or-greater PCIe Gen 5 cable depending on the setup.
Why it works:
- It is the NVIDIA feature path for 1440p high-refresh, ultrawide, ray tracing, and creator overlap.
- 16GB VRAM removes the main RTX 5070 caveat.
- It is easier to justify if your games or apps benefit from NVIDIA-specific features.
Do not buy it if:
- The visible price stays near $1,000 while RX 9070 XT cards are hundreds less.
- You mostly play rasterized games and do not care about NVIDIA features.
- A current product-page check shows poor stock, inflated pricing, or weak partner-card value.
Where I would compare RTX 5070 and RTX 5070 Ti
GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super: Only If The Used Or Open-Box Price Is Right
The RTX 4070 Ti Super is still relevant because it has 16GB GDDR6X, a 256-bit memory bus, and strong 1440p-class hardware. That does not make it the automatic smart buy today. The May 12 price check found visible new/used listings that were often around RTX 5070 Ti territory or worse, including old-stock prices that make little sense for a 1440p-only buyer.
Use this rule:
- Consider RTX 4070 Ti Super only if the final used, open-box, or clearance price is materially below RTX 5070 Ti pricing and still competitive against RX 9070 XT after warranty and seller risk. (Read our full RTX 4070 Ti Super used buying guide for exact condition checks).
- Prefer RX 9070 XT if you want value-first 1440p and the RTX 4070 Ti Super discount is small.
- Prefer RTX 5070 Ti if you want the newer NVIDIA feature stack and the price gap is acceptable.
- Avoid vague marketplace listings, missing adapter details, no-return sellers, unclear photos, and cards advertised only with generic stock images.
Before buying one used or open-box, ask for:
- Exact model name and photos of the card, ports, power connector, and serial label.
- Proof it runs under load, ideally with a recent benchmark or game capture.
- Seller history and a return path.
- Confirmation of included adapter/cable if the model needs one.
- Notes on coil whine, fan noise, temperatures, and whether the card was opened or repasted.
Where to check RTX 4070 Ti Super only if the discount is real
RTX 4080 Super And RTX 5080: Upper-Bound Context
The RTX 4080 Super is not a default 1440p value pick if it is sitting near inflated old-stock pricing. In the May 12 price check, visible RTX 4080 Super prices were often close to or above RTX 5080 listings, which makes it a caution card unless a verified clearance deal changes the math.
The RTX 5080 is powerful, but most 1440p buyers should treat it as a premium upper-bound card. It makes more sense if you also care about 4K, heavy ray tracing, creator workloads, or keeping the same GPU through a future monitor upgrade. NVIDIA lists 360W total graphics power, an 850W system power recommendation, and a 3x PCIe 8-pin adapter or a 450W-or-greater PCIe Gen 5 cable.
VRAM: When 12GB Is Fine And When 16GB Is Safer
Do not reduce VRAM advice to “12GB bad, 16GB good.” A faster 12GB GPU can still be a good 1440p card in the right games and price window. The question is how long you plan to keep it and what kind of games you play.
12GB can be fine when:
- You mostly play esports, older games, lighter competitive settings, or DLSS-friendly games.
- You upgrade often.
- The card is meaningfully cheaper than 16GB alternatives.
- You prefer NVIDIA features and understand the tradeoff.
Prefer 16GB when:
- You want high textures in newer AAA games.
- You use 1440p ultrawide or sometimes play at 4K.
- You keep GPUs for several years.
- You are buying used/open-box upper-midrange hardware where the price gap is small.
Ray Tracing, DLSS, FSR, And Frame Generation
Ray tracing and upscaling matter, but they should not turn the article into a brand ad. NVIDIA is the lower-risk choice for many buyers who depend on DLSS, ray tracing edge cases, CUDA/creator workflows, NVENC, and the broader RTX software ecosystem. AMD is often the stronger value argument when the buyer mainly wants rasterized 1440p gaming, 16GB VRAM, and a lower price.
Frame generation deserves careful wording. It can improve smoothness in supported games, but it depends on good base performance and does not replace native responsiveness. For competitive games, start with native performance and latency. For single-player games, upscaling and frame generation can be useful tools when used with realistic expectations.
For benchmark context, watch this after you know your buying lane. The useful part is not the exact average FPS number from one test bench; it is how RX 9070 XT, RX 9070, RTX 5070 Ti, and RTX 5070 trade blows across real games.
PSU, Connectors, Case Fit, And Adapter Checklist
Before checkout, verify the exact partner card, not just the GPU chip name.


Representative photos only. Check the exact cable, adapter, connector position, case clearance and bend room for the card you buy.
| GPU class | Power / PSU evidence | Connector evidence | What to check |
|---|---|---|---|
| RX 9070 | 220W board power, 650W recommended PSU | 2x8-pin | PSU quality, two separate PCIe cables if recommended by the PSU/card maker, and case clearance. |
| RX 9070 XT | 304W board power, 750W recommended PSU | 2x8-pin | Case airflow, card length/thickness, and whether your PSU has enough clean headroom. |
| RTX 5070 | 250W graphics power, 650W system power | 2x8-pin adapter or 300W+ PCIe Gen 5 cable | Adapter/cable included, cable bend clearance, and exact model connector layout. |
| RTX 5070 Ti | 300W graphics power, 750W system power | 2x8-pin adapter or 300W+ PCIe Gen 5 cable | Same connector check, plus case fit for larger triple-fan models. |
| RTX 4070 Ti Super | 285W-class card in review/spec context | 12V-2x6 / 16-pin adapter context varies by model | Exact model connector, included adapter, used-card connector condition, and warranty. |
| RTX 5080 | 360W graphics power, 850W system power | 3x8-pin adapter or 450W+ PCIe Gen 5 cable | PSU capacity, cable path, case length, and whether the card is overkill for your monitor. |
Do not panic-buy a new PSU just because a GPU has a higher recommendation, but do not ignore PSU quality either. A cheap or aging unit can turn a GPU upgrade into instability. Check wattage, model reputation, warranty age, cable support, and whether the card physically fits your case.
Used And Open-Box GPU Checklist
Used GPUs can be good buys, especially when new stock is overpriced, but the discount has to pay for the risk.
Before buying used or open-box:
- Compare the final price against new RX 9070, RX 9070 XT, RTX 5070, and RTX 5070 Ti options.
- Confirm the exact model, not just the chip name.
- Check return policy and warranty transfer rules.
- Ask for current photos of the card, serial label, ports, fans, and power connector.
- Ask for proof the card runs under load.
- Avoid listings with vague condition notes, missing adapters, damaged connector photos, or no seller history.
- Budget for risk: fan wear, coil whine, thermal paste age, dust, shipping damage, and no manufacturer support.
For RTX 4070 Ti Super specifically, the deal only becomes interesting when it is meaningfully cheaper than an RTX 5070 Ti and still competitive with an RX 9070 XT after risk. If the price is close, buy the cleaner current-gen option.
If This GPU Is Part Of A Full PC Build
If you are building a full PC rather than upgrading only the GPU, match the card to the build tier:
- Budget 1440p: RX 9070 or RTX 5070, depending on price and feature needs.
- Value 1440p high-refresh: RX 9070 XT first, RTX 5070 Ti if NVIDIA features justify the premium.
- Enthusiast 1440p / some 4K: RTX 5070 Ti or RTX 5080, depending on monitor and workload.
- Used-value build: RTX 4070 Ti Super only after a strict seller and price check.
For a full build, match this GPU tier to your CPU, PSU, case airflow, storage budget, and monitor before buying. If you have not chosen the rest of the machine yet, use the current PC build guide as the broader planning page, then come back here for the GPU decision.
If you are not sure what is inside the PC you already own, start with the Windows PC specs guide before shopping. If the upgrade is mainly for Counter-Strike 2 or another competitive shooter, use the CS2 FPS guide to separate GPU limits from CPU, RAM, settings and background-process problems.
The Five-Minute Checkout Check
Do this before you pay, even if you already know the model you want:
- Open the exact product page, not only the search result. Confirm the GPU name, VRAM amount, card length, thickness, power connector, seller, shipping source, return window, and warranty path.
- Compare the final checkout price against the next lane up and down. A “deal” is not a deal if an RX 9070 XT is close to RTX 5070 money, or an RTX 4070 Ti Super is priced like a cleaner current-gen card.
- Check your case clearance and PSU cables. The chip name does not tell you whether a thick partner card fits your case or whether the adapter can sit without a sharp cable bend.
- Match the card to your games. Esports and competitive shooters care more about base FPS and latency; cinematic single-player games can benefit more from ray tracing, DLSS/FSR, and frame generation.
- If buying used or open-box, make the discount pay for the risk. Current photos, return terms, adapter/cable proof, seller history, and load-test evidence matter more than a pretty listing title.
For specs that can change by board partner, use the official AMD or NVIDIA product pages as the starting point, then verify the exact model from the retailer or manufacturer listing. For performance context, independent benchmark sources and the video above help you see the broad shape, but your final decision should still come down to the exact price, monitor, games, PSU, case and seller risk.
FAQ
Is 12GB VRAM enough for 1440p?
Sometimes. It can be enough for esports, lighter games, many current titles with sensible settings, and buyers who upgrade often. For newer AAA games, ultrawide 1440p, high textures, and longer hold times, 16GB is safer.
Is the RTX 4070 Ti Super still worth buying?
Only at the right price. It is still a capable 16GB 1440p GPU, but it should be treated as a used, open-box, or clearance deal. If it costs near RTX 5070 Ti money, or if seller risk is high, skip it.
Is the RTX 5080 overkill for 1440p?
For a standard 1440p 144-180Hz monitor, usually yes. It becomes easier to justify if you also play at 4K, use heavy ray tracing, run creator workloads, or plan to keep the card through a future monitor upgrade.
AMD or NVIDIA for 1440p?
Choose AMD when price, VRAM, and rasterized gaming value matter most. Choose NVIDIA when DLSS, ray tracing, CUDA/creator workflows, NVENC, or the RTX software ecosystem matter enough to pay extra.
Should I buy a used GPU?
Only when the discount is large enough to justify the risk. For RTX 4070 Ti Super and other previous-gen cards, compare against current new RX 9070, RX 9070 XT, RTX 5070, and RTX 5070 Ti prices before accepting a used listing.
Shopping note: prices and availability can change quickly. Check the exact model, seller, condition, warranty, and return window before buying.
