Skip to main content

The best GPU benchmarking software

If you’ve been working for weeks to build your own PC, or you’ve spent plenty of time trying to speed up an existing graphics card, you want a tool to test how fast it is — and how it compares to the competition. Benchmarks will give you plenty of data to help you compare and contrast your graphics card’s capabilities with friends and strangers around the world, as well as give you an idea of how it might perform in certain games.

Here are some of the best GPU benchmarking applications you can use today.

Note: Benchmarks can be synthetic or real-world. Synthetic benchmarks run your GPU through a preset test designed to mimic intensive gaming, etc., to see how it performs and spit out a score at the end. Real-world benchmarks are more focused on monitoring ongoing performance while you’re gaming and are typically either in-game benchmarks that use scenes from actual gameplay or a piece of live-played game with the frame rate and other elements recorded separately. This list focuses primarily on synthetic tests, but if you want to stress your graphics card in real games, here are the best games to benchmark your GPU, and gorgeous games to show off what your card can do.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

3DMark

3DMark benchmark software showing test results.
Futuremark

3DMark is a 3D rendering benchmarking app developed by UL (after it acquired the original developer, Futuremark). It’s been a useful tool for testing GPU performance for over 20 years and the latest version is better than ever. It comes with several gaming-focused benchmarks, from the iconic but aging Time Spy to the ray-tracing-centric Port Royal. All of them will put your graphics card through its paces at various pre-defined, and customizable settings, as well as test your CPU and overall system gaming performance.

When you get to the end of a benchmark run, you’ll get a useful scoresheet along with a report on what your estimated frame rate may be for various games. You can also run a looped benchmark to gather more data over time; a more useful tool than a snapshot when you’re focused on stability (they also keep a log of legacy benchmarks if you want to experiment with old hardware).

3DMark is also very popular, which is a built-in advantage for benchmarking software: Comparing your own GPU scores to others with similar GPUs and rigs allows you to see just where your performance currently falls and how effective your overclocking efforts have been. 3DMark’s built-in comparison options are particularly good for this kind of rigorous optimization. While the software is priced at $30, Steam does have a demo you can try out with some limited benchmarking options.

Superposition

Superposition benchmark software showing VR test results.
Unigine

Don’t feel like paying for your benchmarking software? Superposition, using the Unigine engine, is one of the best free options available for testing performance and stability, with a global leaderboard you can check when you want to push your overclocking efforts even further. It also includes several useful modes, including a free roam option with a set of mini-games, ongoing GPU temperature, and clock monitoring, and tests specifically for virtual reality (VR) gaming (which aren’t always easy to find for free).

While the base version of the Superposition software is free, there are paid versions if you want the ability to post on the leaderboard yourself, run looped tests, and more.

FurMark by Geeks3D

FurMark by Geeks3D running fur rendering test.
Geeks3D

FurMark’s lightweight benchmarking app gets its name from rendering highly demanding 3D fur, which it uses to see just what a GPU can handle. This option is most useful for stress tests, such as testing what a new GPU can put up with before you start tweaking. It can provide a variety of useful data, from temperature and clock speed to fan speed and GPU load. You can also select a temperature alert to sound an alarm when your GPU reaches a certain temperature, ideal for checking your overheating limits. Just be careful using stress tests like these when your GPU is already overclocked.

GFXBench 5.0

GFXBench 5.0 benchmark test options.
Geekbench

GFXBench 5.0 is a capable GPU benchmarking app with excellent platform compatibility: You can run tests across Windows, MacOS, iOS, and Android, making it useful for a wide variety of comparisons. But if you’re primarily interested in seeing which are the best graphics card, you’ll enjoy the straightforward scoreboard here: Just find your GPU model, or choose a test from the drop-down menu to see how GPUs have performed in the past.

Likewise, the GFXBench 5.0 app itself doesn’t have much of a learning curve, making it easy to run a simple test for performance, stability, render quality, and power consumption. It’s a particularly handy option for mobile gaming tests, although the desktop versions of the software can still provide plenty of useful information.

PassMark PerformanceTEST

PassMark PerformanceTEST benchmark test results.
Passmark

PassMark’s software is a great graphics benchmark that offers both a standard suite of tests and an advanced suite, depending on what specifically you are testing for. The standard options include 2D and 3D testing for basic tasks or modeling software, while the advanced testing options are more gamer-friendly, with tests that run through fogging, lighting, blending, texturing, resolution, color depth, and more. Overall, it’s a great pick for a wide variety of testing situations, with a bold, colorful interface that makes it easy to check your numbers. While the app does come with pricing tiers, there’s a free trial you can try out first.

When you’re through, PassMark also offers a complete suite of comparison tools you can use to see how your performance numbers match other users.

Using in-game benchmarks

The Division benchmark test results in the game.
screenshot / Digital Trends

A number of games also offer in-game benchmarking tools that you can use to check performance without the need to download third-party software. We even have a list of our favorite games to benchmark your GPU. But if you want to know how your GPU plays in a certain game, you may need to test it yourself and record your frame rate while playing.

Editors' Recommendations

Tyler Lacoma
Former Digital Trends Contributor
If it can be streamed, voice-activated, made better with an app, or beaten by mashing buttons, Tyler's into it. When he's not…
RTX 4090 owners are in for some bad news
Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090 GPU.

Nvidia's RTX 4090 remains the undisputed most powerful GPU on the market right now, despite being a year-and-a-half old. As such, you might think that reselling it later should be a breeze, not to mention that it should net you a nice amount of money -- but that is not always the case.

Wccftech reports that one owner of an MSI RTX 4090 tried to use the Micro Center GPU Trade-In Program to get some money back, and the GPU was valued at just $700 -- a mere 36% of the total cost of the graphics card.

Read more
Best tools to stress test your CPU
A CPU cooler installed on a motherboard.

Running a CPU stress test tool is a great way to break in a new processor, test an overclock, see how capable your cooling is, or just make sure your PC is running as well as it should. There are a number of CPU stress tests out there, but we have a few favorites you should check out.

The goal of stress testing is to push the computer to failure. You want to see how long it takes before it becomes unstable. It's usually a good idea to run tests for at least an hour or two, though some can take longer.

Read more
Intel may fire the first shots in the next-gen GPU war
Intel Arc A770 GPU installed in a test bench.

The GPU market is about to start heating up in just a few short months, and that's not just due to AMD and Nvidia. According to a new report, Intel plans to release its highly anticipated, next-gen Arc Battlemage graphics cards sooner than many have expected, and the GPUs might drop at just the perfect time to steal some sales away from AMD and Nvidia.

The tantalizing news comes from a report by ComputerBase. The publication claims that during Embedded World 2024, an event that took place in Germany, Intel's partners implied that Arc Battlemage GPUs might launch before this year's Black Friday. Realistically, this implies that Intel would have to hit the market in early November at the latest, giving its partners and retailers enough time to make the products readily available during the Black Friday shopping craze.

Read more