PC Thermal Intelligence

Know Your
GPU Temp.
Stay Safe.

Enter your GPU model and current temperature. Get an instant verdict — safe, warm, or dangerously hot — with actionable advice.

≤ 75°C SAFE
76–85°C WARM
86–94°C TOO HOT
95°C+ CRITICAL
Tools

Free Hardware Tools

GPU Temperature Checker

🌡️

Input your GPU model and current temperature. Get an instant Safe / Warm / Hot verdict with specific suggestions tailored to your card.

→ Check Temperature Now

SSD Health Tools

💿

Two tools in one: check your SSD temperature, and estimate how much write life your drive has remaining using real TBW data for 65+ models.

→ Open SSD Tools

GPU Overclock Settings Finder

Select your GPU and get recommended core clock, memory clock, power limit, and safe temperature targets — specific to your exact model.

→ Find OC Settings

PC Bottleneck Checker

🔁

Find out if your CPU or GPU is holding back your system. Results broken down at 1080p, 1440p, and 4K — for gaming, streaming, and editing.

→ Check Bottleneck

PSU Wattage Calculator

🔌

Select your CPU, GPU, RAM, drives, fans, and cooling to get an accurate power draw estimate, the right PSU wattage, and specific unit recommendations with buying links.

→ Calculate PSU Requirements
Knowledge Base

GPU Temperature Guides

What Is a Good GPU Temperature While Gaming?

Complete breakdown of safe, warm, and dangerous GPU temps across all major GPU models and use cases.

→ Read guide

Is 75°C Safe for an RTX 4050?

Detailed answer for RTX 4050 and similar mid-range GPUs — what 75°C means, when to worry, and what to do.

→ Read guide

Wanting to Overclock? Here’s How to Do It Safely

Step-by-step process, safe temperatures, stress testing, and specific settings for 40+ GPU models.

→ Read guide

How Hot Is Too Hot for Laptops?

Gaming laptop thermal limits, throttling behavior, and how to stay cool under load.

Best Laptop Cooling Methods in 2025

From cooling pads to undervolting — every method ranked by effectiveness and cost.

What GPU Temperature Causes Damage?

TJ Max explained, long-term heat damage, and the real temperature thresholds that matter.