Home / Component / CPU / Intel Core Ultra 200 series to feature 18 SKUs

Intel Core Ultra 200 series to feature 18 SKUs

Intel is rumoured to be working on an extensive line-up of 18 SKUs for the Core Ultra 200 series. Intel is expected to make use of two dies, B0 for high-end chips and C0 for the mid-range. Although we were expecting three Core Ultra 9 versions, only two (285K and 275) are mentioned in this report.

According to Jaykihn, all the Core Ultra 9 CPUs will have 4 Xe-Cores for graphics and 24 cores (8P+16E), with clock speeds and TDP variations. Moving to the Core Ultra 7 range, it will offer two variants of the B0 silicon, one with and one without graphics, and the core count will be reduced from 16 to 12 E-cores. Lastly, the Core Ultra 5 line-up is proving to be complex. It is expected to be based on the B0 and C0 dies, with either 14 or 10 cores, and different graphics configurations, 4, 3, 2 or 0 Xe-Cores.

Image credit: Jaykihn

In addition to the line-up, @OneRaichu shared some information on the Core Ultra 9 285K in a weird way. Per the post, the top SKU will be “57/4” and “47/6”, which we interpreted as the P- and E-cores clock speeds. As such, we expect the flagship SKU of the Arrow Lake-S line-up to reach a boost clock speed of 5.7GHz on a single-core and 5.4GHz on all cores. As for the E-cores, a single one should be able to boost up to 4.7GHz, but all-core boost clock speed should be 4.6GHz.

Intel is expected to share more on the Core Ultra 200K series in the following months ahead of a Q4 launch.

Discuss on our Facebook page, HERE.

KitGuru says: While the Core Ultra 9 and Core Ultra 7 line-ups look more or less streamlined, the same can't be said about the Core Ultra 5 series. Although Intel might have good reasons to do it this way, so many variations falling under the same banner can get complicated quite easily.

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Intel Arrow Lake Refresh has been benchmarked in Geekbench

New data from Geekbench has surfaced for Intel's unannounced "Arrow Lake Refresh", branding the upcoming performance bump as the "Plus" series. While these chips weren't mentioned during Intel's CES 2026 keynote, the new leaks suggest that both desktop (LGA-1851) and mobile (HX) refreshes are right around the corner...