For most of the last two years, 32GB of VRAM on a single card meant either an RTX 5090 or a step up into workstation silicon. AMD’s Radeon AI Pro R9700 changes that math: 32GB on one card at £199/month on dedicated GPU hosting. That is the cheapest route to a 32GB VRAM budget we have listed, and it reshapes what mid-market teams can self-host without going multi-GPU.
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Why 32GB Is the Line That Matters
VRAM is the hard wall in self-hosting. A model either fits or it does not. The jump from 24GB to 32GB is the difference between squeezing a quantised model in with no room for context, and running it comfortably with a long context window and real batch sizes. At 32GB you can hold a 70B model at 4-bit quantisation, run a 32B model at higher precision, or serve a mid-size open-source LLM with concurrent users instead of one request at a time.
The R9700’s 32GB also lands in a useful spot for image generation. Flux.1 and SDXL with multiple LoRAs, ControlNet stacks and high-resolution upscaling all benefit from the extra headroom that 16GB cards run out of.
What the R9700 Actually Runs
| Workload | Fits in 32GB? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Llama 3.1 70B (4-bit) | Yes | With room for context, not just weights |
| Qwen 2.5 32B (8-bit) | Yes | Comfortable, with concurrency headroom |
| Mixtral 8x7B (4-bit) | Yes | MoE fits with batching room |
| Flux.1 Dev + LoRAs | Yes | High-res generation without OOM |
| SDXL + ControlNet stack | Yes | Multiple conditioning models loaded |
For throughput data across cards and models, see our tokens per second benchmark.
The Price Tier It Disrupts
At £199/month the R9700 sits between the 24GB RTX 3090 (£159) and the 32GB RTX 5090 (£399). For workloads that are VRAM-bound rather than compute-bound – which describes most LLM decode – that is a compelling middle. You get the full 32GB capacity at half the cost of the 5090, trading peak tensor throughput you may not be using anyway.
Try 32GB on a Dedicated Server
Run 70B-class models on a single card. UK dedicated hosting, flat monthly pricing, no per-token fees.
Browse GPU ServersROCm in 2026: The Software Caught Up
The historical knock against AMD for AI was software, not silicon. That gap has closed materially in 2026. ROCm now ships first-class support in the major inference stacks – vLLM, llama.cpp and the Hugging Face ecosystem run without the patching gymnastics they once needed. If you have not looked at AMD since 2023, the deployment story is no longer the blocker it was. See our AMD ROCm 2026 update for the current state of support.
Verdict
The R9700 is not the fastest card on the list, and it will not displace the 5090 for compute-heavy training or the most demanding real-time pipelines. But as the lowest-cost path to 32GB of VRAM, it is the clearest value story in the current lineup for VRAM-bound inference. If your bottleneck is “does the model fit,” the R9700 answers it for £199.
For more on the 2026 hardware shifts, track the news section, compare options in our GPU comparisons hub, and run the numbers with the GPU vs API cost comparison.