Equipment

Best gaming motherboards in 2024-these are the mobos I’d build a system around today

Think of the best gaming motherboard as the foundation for your future PC. Your motherboard dictates what your gaming PC can and can not do. It also tells what components you should buy since not all PC parts fit into all motherboards. A good motherboard should ideally provide you with worry-free gaming lasting multiple CPU and GPU generations.

When it comes to AMD’s Zen 4 and Zen 5 processors, the best X670 gaming motherboard is the Gigabyte X670 Aorus Elite AX, thanks to its excellent feature set for a very reasonable price. For those considering Intel’s CPUs, the best Z790 gaming motherboard is the MSI MAG Z790 Tomahawk WiFi, which also has a huge number of ports and features for the cash.

Existing AM5 boards will work with both Zen 4 and Zen 5 AMD chips, providing you keep your BIOS updated, while Intel is going to be rolling out a brand new socket requiring entirely fresh boards once Arrow Lake chips eventually arrive. For now, though, this guide covers all your bases for a great gaming PC build. If you want something smaller than what we’re showing here, however, then check out our guide to the best Mini-ITX motherboards.

Editor-in-chief, Hardware

The Quick List

The best Intel Z790

Considering the huge number of slots for SSDs and ports for USB devices, you’d expect this premium Z790 board to be really expensive. But it’s not and it’s far cheaper than other models which offer little more. It’s not the best for serious overclocking features, though.

Read more below

The best Intel Z690

The Z690 Aorus Pro is surprisingly well-priced, considering the amount of features and overall spec level. It offers masses of M.2 slots and USB ports for storage and peripherals, and it’s a great choice if you want performance but don’t want the Z790 price tag.

Read more below

The best Intel B760

The delightfully retro ASRock B760M PG Sonic WiFi is an excellent choice for a user after a value-for-money board without losing too much in the way of features. It’ll happily power an i9 CPU and it’s generally cheaper now than it was at the time we reviewed it a year or so back.

Read more below

The best AMD X670

There are way more expensive motherboards for AMD Zen 4 and Zen 5 CPUs, but they’re not worth it when this Gigabyte Aorus Elite AX offers you just about everything you could possibly need. Only the lack of PCIe 5.0 SSD support might put you off.

Read more below

The best AMD B650

While it’s a little on the pricey side for a B650 motherboard, you won’t feel short-changed with this Asus TUF Gaming model. Three M.2 slots for SSDs, lots of USB ports, and excellent support for high-power Ryzen series processors make this a really solid buy.

Read more below

The best AMD X570

AM4 socket CPUs are still worth buying, especially the Ryzen 5000 range, so do yourself a favour and pair it with this outrageously good motherboard. Yes, it’s expensive, but the feature set and overclocking potential are second to none.

Read more below

The best AMD B550

This is the very best AMD B550 motherboard you can buy. Period. It’s not even super expensive, despite its comprehensive feature set. The only thing going against it is the fact the X570 boards aren’t that much more in price.

Read more below

Updated September 11, 2024 to check our recommendations, which all remain the same for now, and to tidy up some of the review copy.

Best Intel Z790 gaming motherboard

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The MSI MAG Z790 Tomahawk Wi-Fi is the best Z790 gaming motherboard you can buy right now, thanks to its wealth of features, support for any Intel CPU, and reasonable price tag. At $319/£337/AU$569 it’s not cheap, though compared to what some premium tier boards are selling for, it’s not badly priced at all. There’s tough competition from the other vendors in its price range though.

You’re getting support for four M.2 drives, though none of them are PCIe 5.0 capable—PCIe 4.0 is the fastest you get, but that’s not an issue. The Z790 Tomahawk also comes with seven SATA ports. For bulk storage, SATA still has a place and those seven ports alone may be a deal-maker for some users.

Unlike some PCIe 5.0 SSD supporting boards, such as the more expensive Gigabyte Aorus Z790 Master with its massive M.2 heatsink, the Tomahawk doesn’t need one, sticking with a low profile design that doesn’t require lots of surface area.

If you make up a checklist of what you want from a motherboard, the MSI Z790 Tomahawk should have most of what you need. Things like USB4 or 10G LAN are what board makers use to justify the price of motherboards costing double the money of the Z790 Tomahawk. The checklist is complete for most users.

Wi-Fi 6E, 2.5G LAN, a strong VRM capable of handling an i9 14900K, lots of USB ports including 3.2 Gen 2×2, a solid BIOS, and a discrete design ready to blend in with just about any build theme. Ask yourself if you need more, because if you do, be prepared to take a big step up in price.

Perhaps its lack of PCIe 5.0 M.2 support counts against and it requires good airflow if you subject it to heavy loads, but the MSI MAG Z790 Tomahawk is still a solid, feature-rich board that delivers a core feature set that will suit 95% or more of users.

Read our full MSI MAG Z790 Tomahawk Wi-Fi review.

Best Intel Z690 gaming motherboard

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When the first Z690 motherboards for Intel’s Alder Lake CPUs were announced, it was expected that they would all be super-expensive. The Gigabyte Z690 Aorus Pro bucked that trend by offering a rounded feature set, along with DDR5 support, for around $330/£278/AU$499. This is why it’s such an easy decision for us to recommend it as the best Z690 gaming motherboard.

There are cheaper DDR4 boards around—Gigabyte also makes an Aorus Pro in DDR4 flavor, too, though that’s not sold in the US or EU—but if you want to get the absolute most out of the new Intel platform you want DDR5.

Gigabyte has been smart about the way it’s specced out the Aorus Pro. By limiting it to ‘just’ Wi-Fi 6 wireless (as opposed to Wi-Fi 6E) and 2.5G Intel wired networking connections, and eschewing such unnecessary luxuries as Thunderbolt 4 or another M.2 slot, it has managed to keep the price at least relatively sensible.

And it’s a great performer, too, delivering system and gaming performance easily on par with the far more expensive boards we’ve also tested. The BIOS is maturing regularly as well, which makes us completely confident in recommending the Gigabyte board as our pick of the Z690 bunch.

The only downside with this option is the high contrast design, with lots of grey heatsinks. Though a lot of the grey chipset and M.2 cooling will be hidden beneath a GPU, it might not be the easiest board to blend in with your build. There’s also minimal RGB lighting with just a tiny Aorus logo atop the rear I/O heatsink.

That was rare for a gaming motherboard in 2022, and probably even more so today. There are four RGB headers, though, with two of them being addressable, so you can still add plenty of flashy illumination if you really want.

Gigabyte’s Z690 Aorus Pro sits in a genuine Alder Lake sweet spot, where it offers good value for money and a nice, rounded feature set. Features such as Thunderbolt 4, a fifth M.2 slot, or 10G LAN would add considerable extra cost which is hard to justify. With plain Wi-Fi 6, 4x M.2 slots, a strong VRM, and loads of USB ports, most gamers will be happy. And at this price, you’ll have a few dollars that you can put towards the pricier things, like a faster GPU.

Read the full Gigabyte Z690 Aorus Pro review.

Best Intel B760 gaming motherboard

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Aesthetics shouldn’t really matter when looking for a budget motherboard, but the ASRock B760M Sonic Wi-Fi is different—not only is it (subjectively) a great looker, it’s feature-rich and very capable, and our choice for the best B760 gaming motherboard.

Mind you, the Sonic branding is everywhere. There’s a large blue Sonic stencil on the rear of the board and even the BIOS has a Sonic blue theme. The heatsinks have a brushed metal look and you get a line of RGBs underneath the bottom M.2 heatsink.Fortunately, underneath it all is a very fine motherboard.

The B760M Sonic has a good list of features for a Micro-ATX board. It’s got a PCIe 5.0 x16 slot and a PCIe 4.0 x1 slot. There are three PCIe 4.0 M.2 slots, all of which are cooled by simple heatsinks, and they’re joined by four SATA ports. The four memory slots support 192GB of memory, though with the latest BIOS, you even have the option of running 256 GB. Not that many will require that much RAM, but it’s nice to know the potential is there, at least.

The VRM setup is a decent 12+1+1 phase design with dual 8-pin power connectors. It happily ran an i9 13900K in our testing, and it will accept 14th Gen processors with the newer BIOSes, so you won’t have any concerns with a Core i5 or i7 CPU.

ASRock has given its B760M Sonic Wi-Fi some pretty decent rear I/O connectivity. You get four USB 2.0 ports and four 10 Gbps Gen 2 ports, one of which is Type-C. Intel WiFi 6E and Realtek 2.5G LAN controllers take care of networking duties, while Realtek ALC897 provides audio.

It also has HDMI 2.1 and DP 1.4a ports, which add a bit of flexibility for non-gaming purposes. One of the more unusual features you’ll see is an eDP header that can be used with ASRock’s case-mounted LCD panel.

Intel’s B-series motherboards have come a long way in recent years and the ASRock B760M Sonic Wi-Fi is a good example of that. It can run a power-demanding CPU and host lots of fast DDR5 memory, and its connectivity options match those of high-end boards from just a few years ago. Users looking for an affordable motherboard won’t have any buyer’s remorse.

There’s a lot of competition in this price range, with all major vendors having decent options. There aren’t any that offer the capabilities of the ASRock though, and none of the competing options come with the lovely Sonic theme that sets this one apart from a rather bland crowd.

Read our full Asrock B760M PG Sonic WiFi review.

Best AMD X670 gaming motherboard

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If you’re in the market for the best X670 gaming motherboard, then the Gigabyte X670 Aorus Elite AX comes with enough great features, at such a reasonable price point, that you shouldn’t bother considering any X670E boards.

Part of the reason X670E boards cost a lot is because of the high-quality signalling required for both PCIe 5.0 expansion and M.2 slots. But since PCIe 5.0 x16 for graphics cards means nothing right now, an X670 board is a perfectly viable option. And at $289/£349/AU$599, the Gigabyte X670 Aorus Elite AX is a heck of a lot better value than X670E boards.

In total, there are four M.2 slots made up of the aforementioned primary PCIe 5.0 x4 one, plus a further three PCIe 4.0 x4 slots that are cooled by a single large heatsink. There are four SATA ports to round out the storage complement. Other highlights include a USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 type-C header, power, reset, and CMOS clear buttons, and a Thunderbolt 4 header.

The board comes with a 16+2+2 phase VRM with 70A power stages. More than enough for the average user. Throw a Ryzen 9 7950X with PBO enabled into the Elite AX and you won’t have a problem.

The cooling, storage, and VRM are more than enough to suit most users. But is the I/O lacking then? Hardly. The Aorus Elite AX includes AMD’s RZ616 Wi-Fi 6E and Realtek 2.5G LAN. You’d expect to miss out on USB 4 at this price, but the rest of the USB count is stellar. You get a 3.2 Gen 2×2 type-C port, two Gen 2 ports, six Gen 1 ports, and four 2.0 ports. That’s 13 rear USB ports! There’s a HDMI 2.1 port for use with Ryzen 7000’s integrated graphics along with a BIOS flashback button.

The audio is nothing special, though, with an ageing Realtek ALC897 codec taking care of things. An S/PDIF output would be nice too, but apart from that, there’s not much to complain about with regards to connectivity.

If nothing else, the Elite AX shows that manufacturers are getting a bit greedy at the high end of the market. If you absolutely must have USB4, 10G LAN or Thunderbolt, you’ll have to pay a LOT more for it. For the mainstream market, a board like the Aorus Elite AX is where it’s at.

Read our full Gigabyte X670 Aorus Elite AX review.

Best AMD B650 gaming motherboard

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AMD’s B650 might be its mid-range chipset but that doesn’t mean you should expect motherboards using it to be lacking in features. The Asus TUF Gaming B650 Plus Wi-Fi is the best B650 gaming motherboard you can buy because it’s the perfect example of a motherboard that doesn’t lack features.

To start things off, the primary M.2 slot supports up to PCIe 5.0, while the other two support PCIe 4.0. The primary slot’s cooling is relatively small compared to some of the chunky M.2 heatsinks I’ve seen, including those shipping with the Asrock X670E Pro RS and Gigabyte Z790 Aorus Master.

The VRMs are decent, if not spectacular, but it’s all relative. Expecting a gazillion 105A stages is something that’s restricted to boards at well over double the price. The 12+2 phase design with 60A stages is enough to power a Ryzen 9 7950X without issue.

Asus has done a wonderful job with the TUF B650 Plus’ cooling design. The big and chunky heatsinks provide lots of surface area while allowing lots of air to circulate freely. Some mid-tier boards can skimp a little on VRM cooling. Here, Asus did not.

The motherboard comes with a good set of rear I/O ports which are perfectly adequate for things like keyboards, mice and printers, which don’t need high-speed ports. There’s a single 5Gbps Type-C front connector and up to two Type-A and four USB 2.0 ports. Not bad, but a 10 Gbps Type-C port would have been nice. You also get 2.5G LAN and Wi-Fi 6, though notably, not 6E.

Asus’s TUF Gaming B650 Plus is a solid entry into the market. It feels refined, it’s got a good core feature set with excellent cooling and subtle good looks, and apart from the missing out on a PCIe 5.0 slot, it’s destined to have a long life ahead of it. It may not tick every feature check box, but it’s got most of what you need.

Read our full Asus TUF Gaming B650 Plus Wi-Fi review.

Best AMD X570 gaming motherboard

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Asus’ ROG Crosshair VIII Dark Hero wants to be the last AM4 motherboard you’ll ever need. But for that to happen it will need to support any AM4 chip, have masses of connectivity, run cool and stable at all times, and be really easy to use. Fortunately, it does all that and it’s absolutely the best X570 motherboard these days.

The Dark Hero features a rather subtle design. Some might even say it’s a little bland and with a launch price of $400/£400/AU$649, you might expect it to look considerably better. Prices are lower now, as it’s been around for a while, but you still can’t describe it as being cheap. That said, compared to the exorbitant prices of the MSI Godlike and Gigabyte Aorus Extreme, it certainly feels more affordable.

The VRM setup is more potent than that in the regular Hero and the power stages are now rated for 90A, up from 60A. This brings it in line with some of the other premium X570 boards. It certainly won’t have any issues, regardless of what AM4 CPU you use or how much you overclock it.

Storage options comprise three M.2 slots for PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs and eight SATA ports. For most PC gamers, that’s more than enough, and if you really wanted to add more M.2 SSDs, you could always use an expansion card in the second x16 PCIe slot.

The rear IO is packed out, too. If you need extra USB ports for that head massager or plasma ball, there are few motherboards better equipped. There are no less than eight USB 3.2 Gen 2 ports, one of which is Type-C. These are joined by four USB 3.2 Gen 1 ports. There are also BIOS clear and flashback buttons, the LAN and WiFi antenna ports, and the usual set of audio ports including S/PDIF.

The Crosshair VIII Dark Hero might not be the very best AM4 motherboard ever made, we’d have to review a few hundred others to test that claim, but it’s easy to say that the Dark Hero is certainly one of the best AM4 motherboards we’ve ever used.

Read the full Asus ROG Crosshair VIII Dark Hero review.

Best AMD B550 gaming motherboard

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Sure, the Asus ROG Strix B550-E is the same price as plenty of X570 motherboards, but it’s a premium offering, and the best B550 motherboard you can get, thanks to all the trappings you’d expect from Asus’ Republic of Gamers stables. We’re talking 14+2 power stages, M.2 heatsinks, and pre-installed backplates. You also get Wi-Fi 6 wireless networking, as well as Intel 2.5G Ethernet. And RGB LEDs, of course.

What you’ll no doubt be wondering about is performance: Is it actually all that much better than a more prosaic—and cheaper—B550 alternative? At stock clocks and default board settings, the inevitable answer is no. In fact, the Asus ROG Strix B550-E Gaming is a solid 50% pricier than the likes of theMSI MAG B550M Mortarand tangibly slower in most of our benchmarks, including games.

Where the Strix looks stronger, it inevitably involves overclocking. AMD’s laissez-faire approach to clocking the twangers off pretty much any CPU that comes its way, by enabling access to super-simple core ratio tweaks, means you’d almost be mad not to give it a go.

The Strix B550-E gets Asus’ slick and familiar BIOS interface that allows access to not only the core ratio but pretty much every setting a keen overclocker could wish for. So you have the choice of bumping the core ratios up and letting the board work out the details, or getting down and dirty with voltages and timings.

Allowing the board to do the detailed brain work results in an overclock of ourAMD Ryzen 3 3100quad-core test chip of 4.2 GHz on all cores. The Ryzen 3100 is good for a 3.9 GHz boost clock as standard, so that’s a 300 MHz overclock. Which is significant, if not exactly stellar.

The Asus ROG Strix B550-E Gaming is the whole package then, though it does feel like a tough recommendation when many X570 boards are the same price.

Read our full Asus ROG Strix B550-E Gaming review.

Also tested

Where to buy

Where are the best gaming motherboard deals?

In the US:

  • Amazon – Endless discounts on top brand motherboards
  • Walmart – Quality motherboards from as little as $80
  • B&H Photo – Save up to $150 on CPU and motherboard bundles
  • Best Buy – Deals on Asus, Gigabyte, and MSI motherboards
  • Target – Masses of big brand gaming mobos
  • Newegg – Big savings on the best motherboards around

In the UK:

  • Amazon – Tons of gaming motherboards on offer
  • Scan – Get an AM4 motherboard for just £60
  • Ebuyer -All the top brands for gaming motherboards
  • Argos – Top brand motherboards for AMD and Intel CPUs
  • CCL – Discounts on some of the best motherboards

Gaming motherbard FAQ

What’s the most important factor in buying a motherboard?

You need to know which processor you want to build your new rig around. Are you firmly tying yourself to the mast of the good ship Intel, with its Alder Lake and Raptor Lake CPUs? Or are you going to continue flying the AMD Zen 4 or 5 flag proudly? Once you’ve picked your chip, it’s down to features, overclocking intentions, and your budget.

Something to bear in mind: Intel’s 13th and 14th Gen processors have run into big issues with stability lately, although the problem should now have been fixed on many motherboards with a microcode update. Still, if you are deciding to go Intel, it’d be well worth your while checking for BIOS updates regularly. Good advice in general for any mobo, really.

What really matters when buying a motherboard?

Other than knowing which processor you’re going to be fitting, size matters when picking up a motherboard. If you’re building out a standard ATX scale gaming PC, then pretty much any motherboard is open to your whims, but if you want to go for a smaller chassis, either Micro-ATX or Mini-ITX, then you’ll need a corresponding mobo.

That doesn’t necessarily mean sacrificing performance or key features anymore. A single PCIe slot is more than enough for today’s SLI/CrossFire-less GPU world, and even some Mini-ITX boards will come with multiple M.2 SSD slots.

The scale will impact pricing, however. Interestingly Micro-ATX boards are often the most affordable, while Mini-ITX options can be the most expensive. We’ve picked our top two favorite gaming motherboards for each of the main Intel and AMD chipsets to give you the best options around.

Can I overclock on any motherboard?

Definitely not if you have an Intel chip. There are restrictions in place to stop that and you’ll need a Z690 or Z790 motherboard if you want to overclock any of the 13th and 14th Gen K-series CPUs. But don’t worry about it, as they don’t overclock very well anyway.

AMD is more generous, allowing all its CPUs and most of its motherboard chipsets. Basically, as long as you don’t go for the cheapest Ryzen boards (ones with an ‘A’ at the front of its nomenclature), then you’re good to tweak. Though again, just as with Intel chips, there are limited returns.

Jargon buster – motherboard terminology

ATX, Micro-ATX, Mini-ITX
The most common form factors/sizes of a motherboard from largest to smallest, which beyond physical dimensions determines which cases it’ll fit into and (broadly) how many expansion slots are available. There are other, less common form factors (XL-ATX, HPTX, etc.), but these three are the most ubiquitous consumer form factors.

BIOS/UEFI
Basic Input/Output System and Unified Extensible Firmware Interface connect the hardware and software that lives on the board (the firmware) to the operating system (OS, such as Windows or Linux). They allow you to adjust system-level settings, such as fan speed or RAM frequency. UEFI has largely replaced the older BIOS standard.

Chipset
The name for one or two small processors that allow the various parts of a motherboard to talk to each other. The chipset determines which processor generations a motherboard is compatible with and what add-in cards can be used.

DIMM slots
Dual In-Line Memory Module slots are the sockets on a motherboard where your RAM lives. The number of total slots contributes to the maximum amount of RAM your system can handle, paired with the chipset and OS.

Expansion slots (PCIe slots)
Peripheral Component Interconnect Express slots on the motherboard are designed to accommodate add-in cards like graphics cards, SSD cards, dedicated sound cards, etc. PCIe slots are measured in both length (x16, x8, x4, x1) as well as by the number of data transmission lanes they provide (x16, x8, x4, x1).

It’s possible for an x16 slot to only provide 8 lanes of data, for instance, which means the maximum possible data transfer rate is halved (though in many cases because PCIe provides such a high ceiling for transfer speeds, a lower number of lanes doesn’t make a tremendous difference).

SATA ports
Serial Advanced Technology Attachment ports, an interface for connecting storage devices/drives to a motherboard (HDDs, SSDs, optical drives, etc.). The number of physical ports on your board, combined with ports for NVMe storage, will determine the total number of storage drives you can have connected to your PC at any time.

USB header
A connector on the motherboard that allows you to run a cable to the case to add additional USB ports, typically on the front panel (though some cases provide top or rear panel slots as well).

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