The NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 is listed for $11,000 in Japan and €9,000 in Europe.
Although the RTX PRO 6000 ‘Blackwell’ GPU from NVIDIA has the largest GB202 configuration—24,064 CUDA cores spread across 188 streaming multiprocessors operating at up to 2,617 MHz, combined with 96 GB of GDDR7 ECC memory—neither an official launch date nor pricing have been revealed. The card’s initial price, including 21 percent VAT, is €8,982 according to early European merchant listings. More than €10,900 is already being demanded by certain providers. With an approximate estimate of €7,430 before tax, corporate customers analyzing net expenses should expect a large savings, subject to import duties and local tax rules. The RTX PRO 6000 is anticipated to be available from NVIDIA in a number of variations, such as Workstation, Server, and Max-Q editions, which customize cooling and power envelopes to suit various work settings.

The RTX PRO 6000 is listed for ¥1,630,600 (about $11,326) in pre-release listings in Japan, which reflects a similar luxury level. These price tags’ appearance implies that early shipments have subtly arrived at distributors ahead of any official announcement. In order to prepare for a trial run, one Redditor even obtained it ahead of time. Of course, the performance will fall short of the gaming GeForce RTX 5090 SKU until NVIDIA releases RTX PRO-optimized drivers. This price profile sets the RTX PRO 6000 apart from gaming-grade SKUs and is geared toward enterprise workstations and professional workloads that require significant memory capacity and huge computing performance. The server-grade GB200-based Blackwell GPUs designed for AI and HPC workloads are still superior.