Skip to content
Main Navigation Puget Systems Logo
  • Solutions
    • Content Creation
      • Photo Editing
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Adobe Lightroom Classic
        • Adobe Photoshop
        • Stable Diffusion
      • Video Editing & Motion Graphics
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Adobe After Effects
        • Adobe Premiere Pro
        • DaVinci Resolve
        • Foundry Nuke
      • 3D Design & Animation
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Autodesk 3ds Max
        • Autodesk Maya
        • Blender
        • Cinema 4D
        • Houdini
        • ZBrush
      • Real-Time Engines
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Game Development
        • Unity
        • Unreal Engine
        • Virtual Production
      • Rendering
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Keyshot
        • OctaneRender
        • Redshift
        • V-Ray
      • Digital Audio
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Ableton Live
        • FL Studio
        • Pro Tools
    • Engineering
      • Architecture & CAD
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Autodesk AutoCAD
        • Autodesk Inventor
        • Autodesk Revit
        • SOLIDWORKS
      • Visualization
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Enscape
        • Lumion
        • Twinmotion
      • Photogrammetry & GIS
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • ArcGIS Pro
        • Agisoft Metashape
        • Pix4D
        • RealityCapture
    • AI & HPC
      • Recommended Systems For:
      • Data Science
      • Generative AI
      • Large Language Models
      • Machine Learning / AI Dev
      • Scientific Computing
    • More
      • Recommended Systems For:
      • Compact Size
      • Live Streaming
      • NVIDIA RTX Studio
      • Quiet Operation
      • Virtual Reality
    • Business & Enterprise
      We can empower your company
    • Government & Education
      Services tailored for your organization
  • Products
    • Puget Mobile
      Powerful laptop workstations
      • Puget Mobile 16″
    • Puget Workstations
      High-performance desktop PCs
      • AMD Ryzen
        • Ryzen 9000:
        • Small Form Factor
        • Mini Tower
        • Mid Tower
        • Full Tower
      • AMD Threadripper
        • Threadripper 7000:
        • Mid Tower
        • Full Tower
        • Threadripper PRO 7000WX:
        • Full Tower
      • AMD EPYC
        • EPYC 9004:
        • Full Tower
      • Intel Core Ultra
        • Core Ultra Series 2:
        • Small Form Factor
        • Mini Tower
        • Mid Tower
        • Full Tower
      • Intel Xeon
        • Xeon W-2500:
        • Mid Tower
        • Xeon W-3500:
        • Full Tower
    • Custom Computers
    • Puget Rackstations
      Workstations in rackmount chassis
      • AMD Rackstations
        • Ryzen 7000 / EPYC 4004:
        • R550-6U 5-Node
        • Ryzen 9000:
        • R132-4U
        • Threadripper 7000:
        • T121-4U
        • Threadripper PRO 7000WX:
        • T141-4U
        • T140-5U (Dual 5090s)
      • Intel Rackstations
        • Core Ultra Series 2:
        • C132-4U
        • Xeon W-3500:
        • X131-4U
        • X141-5U
    • Custom Rackmount Workstations
    • Puget Servers
      Enterprise-class rackmount servers
      • Rackmount Servers
        • AMD EPYC:
        • E200-1U
        • E140-2U
        • E280-4U
        • Intel Xeon:
        • X200-1U
    • Comino Grando GPU Servers
    • Custom Servers
    • Puget Storage
      Solutions from desktop to datacenter
      • Network-Attached Storage
        • Synology NAS Units:
        • 4-bay DiskStation
        • 8-bay DiskStation
        • 12-bay DiskStation
        • 4-bay RackStation
        • 12-bay FlashStation
      • Software-Defined Storage
        • Datacenter Storage:
        • 12-Bay 2U
        • 24-Bay 2U
        • 36-Bay 4U
    • Recommended Third Party Peripherals
      Curated list of accessories for your workstation
    • Puget Gear
      Quality apparel with Puget Systems branding
  • Publications
    • Articles
    • Blog Posts
    • Case Studies
    • HPC Blog
    • Podcasts
    • Press
    • PugetBench
  • Support
    • Contact Support
    • Support Articles
    • Warranty Details
    • Onsite Services
    • Unboxing
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Our Customers
    • Enterprise
    • Gov & Edu
    • Press Kit
    • Testimonials
    • Careers
  • Talk to an Expert
  • My Account
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. Hardware Articles
  4. /
  5. AMD X570 vs B550 vs A520 Chipset Comparison

AMD X570 vs B550 vs A520 Chipset Comparison

Posted on November 13, 2020 by William George
Always look at the date when you read an article. Some of the content in this article is most likely out of date, as it was written on November 13, 2020. For newer information, see our more recent articles.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Chipset Specifications
  • Chipset Diagrams
  • What do all of these chipsets have in common?
  • What are the differences between AMD’s X570 and B550 chipsets?
  • What is different about AMD’s A520 chipset?
  • Conclusion

Introduction

In recent years, AMD has offered three tiers of chipsets for their mainstream Ryzen processors targeting different price points and users. The latest 500 series chipsets are no different, with the X570, B550, and A520 all supporting use of the new Ryzen 5000 Series CPUs – while bringing varying other capabilities to the table.

But what is a chipset, you might ask? For those who are new to this term, it refers to the hardware on a motherboard that facilitates communication between the processor (CPU), memory (RAM), video card (GPU), expansion cards, storage (SSDs / HDDs), other onboard controllers (audio / networking), and peripherals (USB and Thunderbolt devices, for example). Different chipsets are built to support different generations of CPUs, and provide varying amounts of PCI-Express lanes, SATA ports, USB ports, etc.

Most users won't need to concern themselves with the details of what these chipsets offer, since what really matters in the end is the functionality that the motherboard as a whole provides, but for those who enjoy digging into details we've put together this comparison.

AMD Logo
Image
AMD Logo
Open Full Resolution

Chipset Specifications

Here is a brief chart showing the major differences between these three chipsets:

Chipset Model X570 B550 A520
CPU to Chipset Connection PCIe 4.0 x4 PCIe 3.0 x4 PCIe 3.0 x4
Direct CPU PCIe Generation PCIe 4.0 PCIe 4.0 PCIe 3.0
Direct CPU PCIe Configuration¹ 1×16 or 2×8 1×16 or 2×8 1×16
Chipset PCIe Generation PCIe 4.0 PCIe 3.0 PCIe 3.0
Chipset PCIe Lanes² 16 10 6
Chipset Dedicated SATA Ports 4 4 2
Chipset USB 10Gbps Ports³ 8 2 1
Chipset USB 5Gbps Ports 0 2 2
Chipset USB 480Mbps Ports 4 6 6
Supports Overclocking Yes Yes No

¹ Ryzen CPUs also support one x4 NVMe (which can be configured as 2 x2 NVMe instead)

² Some portion of the chipset PCIe lanes can be configured for more SATA ports instead

³ Ryzen CPUs also provide four USB 10Gbps ports

CTA Image
Custom Workstations

Puget Systems offers a range of powerful and reliable systems that are tailor-made for your unique workflow.

Configure a System!
CTA Image
Labs Consultation Service

Our Labs team is available to provide in-depth hardware recommendations based on your workflow.

Find Out More!

Chipset Diagrams

For those who are more visual, we also found diagrams from AMD showing an overview of each chipset:

AMD X570 chipset block diagram
AMD B550 chipset block diagram
AMD A520 chipset block diagram
AMD X570 chipset block diagram
AMD B550 chipset block diagram
AMD A520 chipset block diagram
Previous Next
System Image
AMD X570 chipset block diagram
AMD B550 chipset block diagram
AMD A520 chipset block diagram
Previous Next

What do all of these chipsets have in common?

Before getting into what makes these chipsets different, lets briefly cover the similarities they share. All three chipsets support AMD's Ryzen 3000 and 5000 series CPUs – and potentially the 4000 series APUs, although details about those remain largely unknown at the time this article was written. Each chipset in this family also allows use of the PCI-Express lanes and USB ports which are built into Ryzen processors, though not always at the same speed.

What are the differences between AMD’s X570 and B550 chipsets?

Between the X570 and B550 chipsets, the biggest difference is lack of PCI-Express version 4.0 support. This is tricky, though, because the Ryzen processors themselves (the 3000 and 5000 series, which these chipsets support) have built-in PCI-Express 4.0 lanes – and those work just fine at 4.0 speeds with both of these chipsets. The additional PCIe lanes provided by the chipset also operate at 4.0 speed in the X570, though, while they are only PCIe 3.0 on B550. That also means the interconnect between the chipset and the Ryzen processor is only operating at PCIe 3.0 speed on B550, while it is the faster PCIe 4.0 on X570.

Looking beyond PCI-Express speed, the B550 chipset also supports fewer total PCIe lanes and a smaller number of USB ports. B550 has 10 PCIe 3.0 lanes available for expansion cards, additional M.2 NVMe slots, and SATA ports compared to 16 from the X570. On the USB front, the total number drops from 12 on X570 to 10 on B550 – and they are slower, on average, with only two of them supporting the latest 10Gbps speed on B550 compared to 8 such ports on X570. Please keep in mind, though, that the Ryzen processor itself will also provide one x4 NVMe connection and four USB 10Gbps ports – so the total number from the chipset is augmented by those as well.

Beyond costing less, the B550 chipset does have one other advantage over X570: less power consumption. The lack of PCIe 4.0 support in tandem with fewer lanes and connections overall reduces how much electricity the chipset uses, which in turn means that it generates less heat. Most motherboards using X570 require active cooling for the chipset, meaning a fan that can add noise and another potential failure point to the system, while most B550 based boards can get away with passive cooling.

Chipset fan on Gigabyte X570 AORUS Ultra motherboard

Small chipset fans like this can be noisy and represent an additional potential failure point

Image
Chipset fan on Gigabyte X570 AORUS Ultra motherboard
Open Full Resolution

What is different about AMD’s A520 chipset?

Compared to X570 and B550, the A520 chipset is somewhat handicapped. Like B550, its built-in PCI-Express lanes only work at 3.0 speed – but beyond that, it also limits the Ryzen processor's own lanes to 3.0 speed. It also does not support splitting the CPU's lanes up to allow use of two video cards, though at the budget price points which the A520 chipset targets that is probably not a big deal.

As is the case with B550, the number of PCIe lanes and USB ports that are supported is further reduced with A520. The number of dedicated SATA ports drops as well: from 4 on the other chipsets to just 2, though some of the PCIe lanes can be diverted to provide more SATA connections if desired by motherboard manufacturers.

Conclusion

AMD has done a good job segmenting these three chipsets, with clear benefits to each. You can probably draw your own conclusions from the information we've presented so far, but if you want my analysis of who the different chipsets are appropriate for – here you go:

A520 – This is clearly the budget option. If you want to get onto the Ryzen platform for as little money as possible, especially if you aren't planning to use any components that would benefit from PCI-Express 4.0 speeds or lots of drives & peripherals, A520 will do the trick.

B550 – Moving up to the mid-range chipset in this family gets you access to the full PCIe 4.0 lanes from the Ryzen processor, and boosts the number of PCIe lanes and ports from the chipset itself compared to A520. Both single and dual video cards can work here, provided the slots on the motherboard are laid out correctly, and one high-speed NVMe drive can be used at its full potential. Combined with the lower power consumption which allows this chipset to be passively cooled, those upgrades make this a solid choice for most folks who are looking for more overall performance and functionality but don't need (or want) to go to extremes.

X570 – The enthusiast option at the top of this food chain, X570 runs all the PCIe lanes at full 4.0 speed. This is ideal for users who want to run a third video card (on the few boards with an appropriate layout to allow that) or utilize multiple high-speed NVMe drives without compromising on transfer speeds. All of that comes at the cost of higher heat output, meaning that you are likely to end up with a chipset fan as well… but if you are running two or three video cards, or an overclocked CPU with a big cooler, you may not end up noticing that extra noise anyhow.

Please also remember that this is simply a comparison of these chipsets, and a motherboard is made up of more than just the chipset. Additional controllers will likely be present to provide things audio, networking, and potentially even more USB ports. Other factors like the VRM design and quality will impact overclocking capability. The board size and slot layout will impact whether dual video cards are feasible. Manufacturing quality affects long-term reliability. And more! So when pondering the chipset for a new PC, keep in mind that in the end you will be picking a motherboard – not just a chipset – and that there are more things to consider when making that selection.

CTA Image
Custom Workstations

Puget Systems offers a range of powerful and reliable systems that are tailor-made for your unique workflow.

Configure a System!
CTA Image
Labs Consultation Service

Our Labs team is available to provide in-depth hardware recommendations based on your workflow.

Find Out More!

Related Content

  • Z890 vs. B860 vs. H810
  • AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D and 9900X3D Content Creation Review
  • Is it Worth Upgrading to NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 50 Series for 3D Artists?
  • Understanding Modern Desktop PC Hardware for Workstations
View All Related Content

Latest Content

  • Do Video Editors Need GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs?
  • Adobe Premiere Pro and After Effects – What’s New In Version 25.2?
  • The Future of LED Walls: Arena & Nuke Stage Go Beyond Game Engines
  • 2025 Tariff Impacts at Puget Systems
View All
Tags: AMD, AMD Ryzen 3rd Gen, AMD Ryzen 5000 Series, Chipset, Comparison, CPU, Motherboard

Who is Puget Systems?

Puget Systems builds custom workstations, servers and storage solutions tailored for your work.

We provide:

Extensive performance testing
making you more productive and giving better value for your money

Reliable computers
with fewer crashes means more time working & less time waiting

Support that understands
your complex workflows and can get you back up & running ASAP

A proven track record
as shown by our case studies and customer testimonials

Get Started

Browse Systems

Puget Systems Mobile Laptop Workstation Icon

Mobile

Puget Systems Tower Workstation Icon

Workstations

Puget Systems Rackmount Workstation Icon

Rackstations

Puget Systems Rackmount Server Icon

Servers

Puget Systems Rackmount Storage Icon

Storage

Latest Articles

  • Do Video Editors Need GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs?
  • Adobe Premiere Pro and After Effects – What’s New In Version 25.2?
  • The Future of LED Walls: Arena & Nuke Stage Go Beyond Game Engines
  • 2025 Tariff Impacts at Puget Systems
  • Z890 vs. B860 vs. H810
View All

Post navigation

 Messy Memory Speed StandardsGPU Rendering – NVIDIA GeForce RTX 30 Series Multi-GPU Scaling 
Puget Systems Logo
Build Your Own PC Site Map FAQ
facebook instagram linkedin rss twitter youtube

Optimized Solutions

  • Adobe Premiere
  • Adobe Photoshop
  • Solidworks
  • Autodesk AutoCAD
  • Machine Learning

Workstations

  • Content Creation
  • Engineering
  • Scientific PCs
  • More

Support

  • Online Guides
  • Request Support
  • Remote Help

Publications

  • All News
  • Puget Blog
  • HPC Blog
  • Hardware Articles
  • Case Studies

Policies

  • Warranty & Return
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Delivery Times
  • Accessibility

About Us

  • Testimonials
  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter

© Copyright 2025 - Puget Systems, All Rights Reserved.