Server First generation Epyc (Naples) The first generation was composed of only the 7001 series SKUs, all using the same MCM topology with four
Zeppelin dies interconnected on the MCM. Each SOC die contributes its two DDR4 memory channels, 32 external PCIe 3.0 lanes, two 4-core core complexes and associated I/O interfaces like 4 SATA ports or several USB ports.
EPYC 7001 series Second generation Epyc (Rome) In November 2018, AMD announced Epyc 2 at their Next Horizon event, the second generation of Epyc processors codenamed "Rome" and based on the Zen 2
microarchitecture. The processors feature up to eight
7 nm-based "chiplet" processors with a 14 nm-based
IO chip providing 128
PCIe 4.0 lanes in the center interconnected via
Infinity Fabric. The processors support up to 8 channels of
DDR4 RAM up to 4
TB, and introduce support for PCIe 4.0. These processors have up to 64 cores with 128
SMT threads per socket. The 7nm "Rome" is manufactured by
TSMC. It has 39.5 billion transistors. In April 2020, AMD launched three new SKUs using Epyc's 7nm Rome platform. The three processors introduced were the eight-core Epyc 7F32, the 16-core 7F52 and the 24-core 7F72, featuring base clocks up to 3.7 GHz (up to 3.9 GHz with boost) within a TDP range of 180 to 240 watts. The launch was supported by
Dell EMC,
Hewlett Packard Enterprise,
Lenovo,
Supermicro, and
Nutanix.
EPYC 7002 series Third generation Epyc (Milan) At the HPC-AI Advisory Council in the United Kingdom in October 2019, AMD stated specifications for Milan, Epyc chips based on the
Zen 3 microarchitecture. Milan chips will use
Socket SP3, with up to 64 cores on package, and support eight-channel
DDR4 RAM and 128
PCIe 4.0 lanes. Milan-X CPUs were launched March 21, 2022.
EPYC 7003 series Fourth generation Epyc (Genoa, Bergamo and Siena) On November 10, 2022, AMD launched the fourth generation of Epyc server and data center processors based on the
Zen 4 microarchitecture, codenamed Genoa. At their launch event, AMD announced that
Microsoft and
Google would be some of Genoa's customers. Genoa features between 16 and 96 cores with support for
PCIe 5.0 and
DDR5. There was also an emphasis by AMD on Genoa's energy efficiency, which according to AMD CEO
Lisa Su, means "lower total cost of ownership" for enterprise and cloud datacenter clients. Genoa uses AMD's new
SP5 (LGA 6096) socket. On June 13, 2023, AMD introduced Genoa-X with 3D V-Cache technology for technical computing performance and Bergamo (9734, 9754 and 9754S) for cloud native computing. On September 18, 2023, AMD introduced the low power Siena lineup of processors, based on the
Zen 4c microarchitecture. Siena supports up to 64 cores on the new SP6 socket, which is currently only used by Siena processors. Siena uses the same I/O die as Bergamo, however certain features, such as dual socket support, are removed, and other features are reduced, such as the change from 12 channel memory support to 6 channel memory support. In May 2024, AMD launched the Raphael lineup of processors, based on the Zen4 microarchitecture. Raphael support up to 16 cores on the AM5 socket.
Fifth generation Epyc (Grado, Turin and Turin Dense) The fifth generation of Epyc processors were showcased by AMD at Computex 2024 on June 3. Named the Epyc 9005 series, it will come in two variants: •
Zen 5 based, up to 128 cores and 256 threads, built on
TSMC N4X process •
Zen 5c based, up to 192 cores and 384 threads, built on
TSMC N3E process Both variants are officially referred to under the
Turin codename by AMD, although the nickname of "Turin Dense" has also been used to refer to the Zen 5c based CPUs. Turin Dense support the x2AVIC CPU feature Both of these processor series will be socket-compatible with the SP5 socket used by Genoa and Bergamo. Epyc 9005 series were launched on October 10, 2024, at AMD's Advancing AI event 2024. In May 2025, AMD announced the Epyc 4005 series of processors, codenamed Grado. They are based on the Zen 5 microarchitecture and support up to 16 cores. Unlike the 9005 series, these processors are
Socket AM5 compatible.
Embedded First generation Epyc (Snowy Owl) In February 2018, AMD also announced the Epyc 3000 series of embedded Zen CPUs.
Later embedded models Starting with Zen 2, the embedded option simply shares the same name as the socket equivalent, hence the EPYC Embedded 7002, 7003, 8004, 9004, and 9005 series. == Chinese variants ==