---
title: "PS5 vs Xbox Series X 2026: Full Spec, Performance and Value Comparison"
date: 2026-07-06
author: "Robert A. Lee"
featured_image: "https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/ps5-vs-xbox-series-x.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Gaming"
    url: "/gaming.md"
tags:
  - name: "Reviews"
    url: "/tag/reviews.md"
---

# PS5 vs Xbox Series X 2026: Full Spec, Performance and Value Comparison

The Xbox Series X holds a **12 teraflops** to **10.28 teraflops** GPU advantage over the PS5, roughly **17%** on paper, yet the cheaper console has outsold it more than two to one, per Sony’s earnings and analyst estimates for Microsoft. That gap between specification and outcome is the real story of this console generation. The comparison below covers raw power, storage, memory, price, exclusives, install base and subscriptions, so the spec sheet stops being the only thing you weigh before buying.

## Key Takeaways

- The Xbox Series X delivers **12 teraflops** of GPU power versus the PS5’s **10.28 teraflops**, a roughly **17%** paper lead that translates to only **1 to 3 FPS** in real [cross-platform games](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/cross-platform-gaming-statistics/).
- The PS5 standard model now costs **$549.99**, more than **$100** below the disc-based Xbox Series X at **$649.99**.
- The PS5’s custom SSD moves data at **5.5 GB/s** raw, more than double the Xbox Series X’s **2.4 GB/s**, though [Xbox](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/xbox-statistics/) ships the larger drive at 1TB against the PS5’s smaller 825GB.
- Per Sony’s earnings, the PS5 has sold **84.2 million** lifetime units as of **September 30, 2025**, against an estimated **34 million** for the Xbox Series X and Series S combined.
- Both consoles run an 8-core AMD Zen 2 CPU, with the Xbox edging ahead at **3.8 GHz** versus the PS5’s variable **3.5 GHz**.
- Per Microsoft, [Xbox Game Pass](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/xbox-game-pass-subscriber/) generated nearly **$5 billion** in revenue last fiscal year with around **35 million** subscribers, while PlayStation Plus holds roughly **47 to 51.6 million** subscribers.

## Editor’s Choice

- **GPU power:** Xbox Series X **12 teraflops** (**52** compute units) vs PS5 **10.28 teraflops** (**36** compute units).
- **SSD throughput:** PS5 **5.5 GB/s** raw vs Xbox Series X **2.4 GB/s** raw.
- **2025 price:** PS5 **$549.99** standard, **$499.99** Digital vs Xbox Series X **$649.99**, **$599.99** Digital.
- **Lifetime sales:** PS5 **84.2 million** vs Xbox Series X/S roughly **34 million** units.
- **Memory:** both ship 16GB of GDDR6, with Xbox using a split **560 GB/s** and **336 GB/s** pool design.
- **PS5 Pro premium tier:** **$749.99**, with no direct Xbox equivalent at that price.

## PlayStation 5 Overview

According to Sony’s published specifications, the [PlayStation](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/playstation-statistics/) 5 pairs a custom AMD RDNA 2 GPU rated at **10.28 teraflops** across **36** compute units running up to **2.23 GHz**, with an 8-core AMD Zen 2 CPU clocked up to **3.5 GHz**. Sony’s headline design choice is speed of access: the PS5’s custom SSD holds 825GB and delivers **5.5 GB/s** of raw throughput, the fastest storage of the two consoles.

Sony built the PS5 around fast data streaming rather than peak compute, a bet that loading time and asset throughput would shape the next-gen feel more than raw flops. That bet has aged well, because near-instant loading is something every player notices on day one, while a teraflop deficit is something most never see. The momentum behind the platform is hard to argue with: per Sony’s latest earnings, the PS5 reached **84.2 million** lifetime units sold as of **September 30, 2025**.

![Checkmark](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/pros-header.png)Pros

- ![Check](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/pros-check.png)Fastest storage of the two, at 5.5 GB/s raw throughput.
- ![Check](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/pros-check.png)Largest install base at 84.2 million units, which keeps third-party support strong.
- ![Check](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/pros-check.png)Strong slate of first-party exclusives.
- ![Check](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/pros-check.png)Lower entry price than the Xbox Series X.



![Cross](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/cons-header.png)Cons

- ![Cross](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Smaller built-in drive at 825GB of total capacity.
- ![Cross](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Lower GPU ceiling at 10.28 teraflops.
- ![Cross](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/cons-cross.png)2025 price hikes pushed the standard model to $549.99.





## Xbox Series X Overview

According to Microsoft’s published specifications, the Xbox Series X leads on raw numbers. Its custom AMD RDNA 2 GPU is rated at **12 teraflops** across **52** compute units at **1.825 GHz**, paired with an 8-core AMD Zen 2 CPU at **3.8 GHz**. Storage favors capacity over speed: the Series X ships a 1TB custom NVME SSD with **2.4 GB/s** of raw throughput.

Microsoft positioned the Series X as the most powerful console of the generation, and on a spec sheet that claim holds. The harder question is whether peak power matters when the install base, the exclusives, and the price all point the other way. [Microsoft](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/microsoft-statistics/) has leaned into services to compensate: per Microsoft, Xbox Game Pass generated nearly **$5 billion** in revenue in the last fiscal year with an estimated **35 million** subscribers.

![Checkmark](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/pros-header.png)Pros

- ![Check](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/pros-check.png)Highest GPU ceiling at 12 teraflops and 52 compute units.
- ![Check](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/pros-check.png)Larger built-in drive at 1TB.
- ![Check](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/pros-check.png)Slightly faster CPU at 3.8 GHz.
- ![Check](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/pros-check.png)Game Pass library bundles a deep back catalog for one subscription.



![Cross](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/cons-header.png)Cons

- ![Cross](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Most expensive disc console at $649.99 after 2025 hikes.
- ![Cross](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Slower storage at 2.4 GB/s raw.
- ![Cross](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Smallest install base of the two at roughly 34 million units.
- ![Cross](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/themes/theme-hunting-huh/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Microsoft no longer reports console unit sales, signaling a shift away from hardware.





## PS5 vs Xbox Series X: Full Spec Comparison Table

Sony’s PS5 and Microsoft’s Xbox Series X share the same AMD silicon family but split on every tuning choice: the Series X leads on GPU at **12 teraflops** while the PS5 leads on storage speed at **5.5 GB/s** and, per both makers’ 2025 pricing, undercuts the Series X by **$100**.

SpecificationPlayStation 5Xbox Series XGPU power10.28 TFLOPS12 TFLOPSCompute units36 at up to 2.23 GHz52 at 1.825 GHzCPU8-core Zen 2 up to 3.5 GHz8-core Zen 2 at 3.8 GHzMemory16GB GDDR6, 448 GB/s16GB GDDR6, 560/336 GB/sInternal SSD825GB, 5.5 GB/s1TB, 2.4 GB/sDisc driveUltra HD Blu-ray (standard)Ultra HD Blu-ray (standard)2025 standard price$549.99$649.99Digital edition price$499.99$599.99Lifetime units sold84.2 million~34 million*Source: Sony PlayStation and Microsoft Xbox official specifications, 2025 pricing, 2026*

## GPU and Raw Power: Teraflops Compared

The Xbox Series X wins the teraflops race on Microsoft’s published specs: the Series X reaches **12 teraflops** across **52** compute units, while Sony rates the PS5 at **10.28 teraflops** across **36** compute units clocked higher at up to **2.23 GHz**. That is a roughly **17%** paper advantage for Microsoft.

Real-world results compress that gap. Cross-platform games typically run within **1 to 3 FPS** of each other on the two consoles, with occasional resolution variations that are hard to detect without pixel-counting tools. Anyone buying a console purely on the teraflop number is optimizing for a benchmark rather than the experience they will actually have on the sofa.

> **By the numbers:** The Xbox Series X holds a **12** to **10.28 teraflops** GPU edge over the PS5, roughly **17%** on paper, per the two manufacturers’ published specs. Yet cross-platform titles run within **1 to 3 FPS** of each other, so the measurable advantage rarely changes which version a player prefers.

## Is Xbox Series X more powerful than PS5?

Yes, on paper the Xbox Series X is more powerful. It carries **12 teraflops** of GPU performance and **52** compute units against the PS5’s **10.28 teraflops** and **36** compute units. The roughly **17%** lead, though, shrinks to **1 to 3 FPS** in most multiplatform games, so the practical power difference is far narrower than the specification suggests.



## CPU and Frame Rates: Processing Power Head to Head

Both [consoles](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/console-market-share-statistics/) run the same processor family, with the Xbox slightly ahead on clock speed. The Xbox Series X uses an 8-core AMD Zen 2 CPU at **3.8 GHz** (**3.6 GHz** with simultaneous multithreading), while the PS5 runs an 8-core Zen 2 CPU at a variable frequency up to **3.5 GHz**.

The CPU rarely becomes the bottleneck in cross-platform play. Frame-rate analysis across dozens of titles shows differences of **1 to 3 FPS** between the two consoles, a margin small enough that most players cannot perceive it without measurement tools. Eight Zen 2 cores on both sides means the CPU is effectively a tie for the games people actually buy.

## Storage Showdown: SSD Speed vs Capacity

Per Sony’s specs, the PS5’s 825GB SSD delivers **5.5 GB/s** of raw throughput, more than double the Xbox Series X’s **2.4 GB/s** across its larger 1TB drive in Microsoft’s specs. Storage is where the two consoles take opposite philosophies: Sony chose speed, Microsoft chose capacity.

 Console by Drive Capacity (GB) Drive Capacity (GB) · Source: Sony PlayStation and Microsoft Xbox official SSD specifications, 2026    Drive Capacity (GB) · SQ MAGAZINE ANALYSIS Console by Drive Capacity (GB)    Sony PlayStation · 2026          1K 750 500 250 0   825 PlayStation 5  1000 Xbox Series X    SOURCE Sony PlayStation and Microsoft Xbox official SSD specifications, 2026       Console by Raw Throughput (GB/s) Raw Throughput (GB/s) · Source: Sony PlayStation and Microsoft Xbox official SSD specifications, 2026    Raw Throughput (GB/s) · SQ MAGAZINE ANALYSIS Console by Raw Throughput (GB/s)    Sony PlayStation · 2026          8 6 4 2 0   5.5 PlayStation 5  2.4 Xbox Series X    SOURCE Sony PlayStation and Microsoft Xbox official SSD specifications, 2026      Both consoles support expansion. The PS5 expands through a standard M.2 NVMe slot, while the Xbox Series X uses a proprietary Storage Expansion Card. The M.2 route tends to be cheaper per gigabyte, which favors the PS5 once a buyer fills the built-in drive.

> **The takeaway:** The PS5 wins raw storage speed at **5.5 GB/s** against the Xbox Series X’s **2.4 GB/s**, while Xbox wins capacity with a 1TB drive against 825GB. Throughput shapes loading and asset streaming; capacity shapes how many large games fit before you buy more. Neither metric alone settles the storage question.

## Memory and Bandwidth

Per Sony, the PS5 carries 16GB of GDDR6 memory with **448 GB/s** of bandwidth, while Microsoft lists the Xbox Series X with 16GB of GDDR6 split into a 10GB pool at **560 GB/s** and a 6GB pool at **336 GB/s**. Memory is the closest dimension on the spec sheet, with both consoles matching on total capacity.

The split design gives Xbox developers a faster pool for graphics and a slower one for the rest of the system. In practice, the unified PS5 layout is simpler to target, which is part of why cross-platform parity is so common despite the on-paper differences.

## Price and Value: Which Console Costs Less?

Per Sony’s August 2025 pricing, the standard PS5 costs **$549.99**, the Digital Edition **$499.99,** and the PS5 Pro **$749.99**. Microsoft set the Xbox Series X at **$649.99** for the disc model and **$599.99** for the digital version as of October 3, 2025, leaving the disc Series X **$100** above the disc PS5. The PS5 is now the cheaper console, reversing the launch-era pattern.

 Model by PlayStation 5 ($)  PLAYSTATION 5 ($) · PlayStation 5 ($) vs Xbox Series X ($) · Source: Sony August 2025 and Microsoft October 2025 US recommended retail prices, 2026    PLAYSTATION 5 ($) · SQ MAGAZINE ANALYSIS Model by PlayStation 5 ($)  PlayStation 5 ($) vs Xbox Series X ($)   Sony August · 2025    PlayStation 5 ($)  Xbox Series X ($)          800 640 480 320 160 0        Standard / disc Digital edition    SOURCE Sony August 2025 and Microsoft October 2025 US recommended retail prices, 2026      

Buying on teraflops alone can cost you $100. The Xbox Series X’s **17%** paper GPU lead delivers only **1 to 3 FPS** in real games, yet it now costs **$100** more than the PS5 at **$649.99**. Weigh the games library and the price before treating the higher teraflop number as the deciding factor.



### Which console is cheaper, PS5 or Xbox Series X?

The PS5 is cheaper. The standard PS5 costs **$549.99** and the Digital Edition **$499.99**, while the disc Xbox Series X costs **$649.99** and its digital version **$599.99**. On the disc editions, the Xbox Series X at **$649.99** carries a **$100** premium over the **$549.99** PS5 after the 2025 price increases.

## Games Library and Exclusives

The PS5’s exclusives advantage rests on reach: per Sony, its **84.2 million** install base as of September 2025 gives PlayStation Studios the largest audience to build for. Microsoft, whose Series X and Series S sit at an estimated **34 million** combined units, has shifted strategy and now ships former Xbox exclusives onto PS5.

Our consumer-loyalty data across Apple, Samsung and gaming platforms shows ecosystem lock-in predicts retention better than satisfaction scores alone, and the console exclusives race follows the same logic: the larger library and audience compound over time.

> **Key finding:** With the PS5 at **84.2 million** units and the Xbox Series X and Series S at roughly **34 million**, Sony commands the larger audience, per Sony’s earnings and analyst estimates. That gap is why Microsoft now releases former Xbox exclusives on PS5, treating its own console as one storefront among several rather than the only one.

## Does PS5 or Xbox have better exclusives?

The answer depends on how you count. The PS5 leans on a deep slate of first-party PlayStation Studios titles, backed by its **84.2 million** install base. Xbox counters with Game Pass, which bundles a large rotating library, and with the Series X and Series S at an estimated **34 million** combined units, Microsoft has shifted its disclosure away from console hardware.

## Backward Compatibility

Both consoles ship an Ultra HD Blu-ray drive and play prior-generation games, with different reach. The PS5 includes an Ultra HD Blu-ray drive on the standard model, while the Xbox Series X also ships an Ultra HD Blu-ray drive on the standard model. Microsoft’s backward-compatibility program reaches further back across earlier Xbox generations where licensed, a genuine edge for players with large legacy libraries, even if it rarely tops a buyer’s checklist.

Both consoles preserve physical media through their disc drives, which matters for collectors and resale, a contrast with the cartridge-and-download model tracked in our [Nintendo platform statistics](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/nintendo-statistics/).

## Sales and Install Base: Who Is Winning the Generation?

Per Sony’s earnings, the PS5 reached **84.2 million** lifetime units as of September 30, 2025, while the Xbox Series X and Series S sit at an estimated **34 million** combined, and Microsoft no longer reports console unit sales in its earnings. That is roughly a **2.5-to-1** lead for Sony, so the hardware race is effectively settled.

ConsoleLifetime Units (million)PlayStation 584.2Xbox Series X and Series S34*Source: Sony FY2025 Q2 earnings and analyst estimates for Xbox, 2026*

Across our platform statistics coverage, engagement and install base compound for the leader, and console generations follow the same curve once a lead opens up.

## Which has sold more, PS5 or Xbox Series X?

The PS5 has sold far more. Sony reported **84.2 million** PS5 units as of September 30, 2025, against an estimated **34 million** for the Xbox Series X and Series S combined. Microsoft has stopped disclosing console unit sales, which itself signals how far the hardware contest has moved in Sony’s favor, the same install-base dynamic that compounds across consumer-tech ecosystems tracked in our [App Store ecosystem statistics](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/app-store-statistics/).

## Subscriptions: Xbox Game Pass vs PlayStation Plus

Per Microsoft, Xbox Game Pass generated nearly **$5 billion** in revenue last fiscal year with an estimated **35 million** subscribers, the strongest value case for the Series X. PlayStation Plus holds roughly **47 to 51.6 million** subscribers across its recent reporting periods, a larger base bundling a narrower all-you-can-play tier.

For a player who values library breadth over owning specific games, Game Pass is the single best reason to pick the Xbox Series X despite its higher hardware price. PlayStation Plus leans on its larger subscriber base and the PS5’s exclusive output rather than a single all-you-can-play tier. The same subscription-versus-ownership tension shapes PC platforms too, as our [Steam user statistics](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/steam-statistics/) show across a far larger storefront.

## Verdict by Use Case

No single console wins for everyone, given that the Xbox Series X’s **17%** GPU edge delivers only **1 to 3 FPS** in real games while the PS5 lists at **$549.99**, a $100 saving. The right pick depends on whether you weigh raw power, library breadth, loading speed, or price most heavily.

- **Best for raw value:** The PlayStation 5 wins on price at **$549.99** versus the Xbox Series X’s **$649.99**, while delivering within **1 to 3 FPS** of the more powerful console in real games. For most buyers, the $100 saving outweighs the 17% paper GPU gap.
- **Best for library breadth:** The Xbox Series X paired with Game Pass, which holds around **35 million** subscribers, suits players who prefer a rotating all-you-can-play library over owning individual titles.
- **Best for fastest loading:** The PlayStation 5 wins, with **5.5 GB/s** of raw SSD throughput against the Xbox Series X’s **2.4 GB/s**, which shows up in shorter load screens and faster asset streaming.
- **Best for legacy game collections:** The Xbox Series X wins, running Xbox One, Xbox 360, and original Xbox titles where licensed, a deeper backward-compatibility catalog than the PS5’s PS4-focused support.

## Is Xbox Series X worth it over PS5?

The Xbox Series X is worth it over the PS5 only for specific buyers. It costs **$649.99**, a **$100** premium over the **$549.99** PS5, and its **17%** teraflop advantage delivers just **1 to 3 FPS** in cross-platform games. The case for paying more rests on Game Pass library value and deeper backward compatibility rather than measurable in-game performance. For pure value, the PS5 remains the stronger pick.

## Can PS5 and Xbox Series X play the same games?

Mostly yes: the vast majority of major third-party titles release on both consoles, and those cross-platform games run within **1 to 3 FPS** of each other. The difference is exclusives, where the PS5 retains a deeper first-party slate against the Xbox Series X and Series S at an estimated **34 million** combined units.

## Conclusion

The Xbox Series X wins the spec sheet with **12 teraflops** against the PS5’s **10.28 teraflops**, yet that roughly **17%** edge delivers only **1 to 3 FPS** in real games while the console costs **$100** more at **$649.99** versus the PS5’s **$549.99**. The PS5 answers with faster storage at **5.5 GB/s**, a lower price, and an **84.2 million** install base that dwarfs the Xbox Series X and Series S total of roughly **34 million**.

For most buyers this year, the PS5 is the stronger value: cheaper, faster-loading and backed by the larger library. The Xbox Series X earns its place for players who prize Game Pass breadth or deep backward compatibility. If the install base and pricing trends of this generation hold, the gap between the two consoles will widen further, even as the games they play grow more alike.