Intel unleashes 14 Panther Lake CPUs — here's what to expect from the new Core Ultra 3 chips

Intel CES 2026
(Image credit: Future)

Monday is always a big day for press conferences at the annual Consumer Electronics Show, and today was no exception. I know because we're on-site at CES 2026 in Las Vegas all week, and we just watched Intel's big keynote shortly after Nvidia's and not long before AMD is set to take the stage.

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Codenamed Panther Lake, these are the same Intel chips we were first introduced to back in October. Back then, we trouped down to Intel to check out the new chips firsthand and test them ourselves, admittedly under the watchful eye of company representatives.

So while we couldn't put these new chips through our full gauntlet of performance tests, we were able to verify that under controlled conditions, these new Core Ultra 3 CPUs are faster and more power-efficient than their predecessors, which should mean better gaming performance and battery life for the best Windows laptops packing these chips.

Since I can't share any independent testing results yet, let's dive into the most notable new features of these chips as well as the specs of the full lineup. Let's dig in!

Intel Core Ultra 3: Biggest upgrades at a glance

Intel Panther Lake

Our own Jason England holds up a slice of Panther Lake silicon from inside one of Intel's wafer fabrication facilities. (Image credit: Intel)
  • Core Architecture: Panther Lake is built on the new Intel 18A node and employs a "System of Chips" design featuring up to 16 cores and fabricated out of smaller "tiles," which can be moved and swapped to fine-tune performance and efficiency.
  • GPU Changes: The GPU built into these new Core Ultra 3 chips introduces a new, more efficient Xᵉ3 graphics architecture and scales up to 12 Xᵉ cores and 12 Ray Tracing Units, delivering better performance and featuring an increased 16 MB L2 Cache in the high-end configuration.
  • Multi-Thread Performance: Multi-thread performance is boosted by more than 50% versus Lunar Lake and Arrow Lake (a.k.a. Intel Core Ultra Series 200 and Series 100 chips) when operating at similar power levels.
  • Single-Thread Power Efficiency (vs. Arrow Lake): It delivers similar single-thread performance with more than 30% less power compared to Arrow Lake, to boot.
  • GPU performance: The new Xe3 architecture reportedly delivers up to 50% more GPU performance compared to Lunar Lake, and achieves 40% higher performance per watt compared to Arrow Lake H. Plus, new XeSS 3 tech introduces multi-frame generation for laptops with integrated graphics — a potential game-changer that could deliver seriously better framerates.

Intel Core Ultra Series 3 chips announced at CES 2026

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Chip

Cores & Threads

P-core max boost

Intel smart cache

Xe cores

Graphics

Intel Core Ultra X9 388H

16

5.1 Ghz

18

12

Intel Arc B390/Pro B390

Intel Core Ultra 9 386H

16

4.9 Ghz

18

4

Intel graphics

Intel Core Ultra X7 368H

16

5.0 Ghz

18

12

Intel Arc B390/Pro B390

Intel Core Ultra 7 366H

16

4.8 Ghz

18

4

Intel graphics

Intel Core Ultra 7 365

8

4.8 Ghz

12

4

Intel graphics

Intel Core Ultra X7 358H

16

4.8 Ghz

18

4

Intel graphics

Intel Core Ultra 7 356H

16

4.8 Ghz

18

12

Intel Arc B390

Intel Core Ultra 7 355

8

4.7 Ghz

12

4

Intel graphics

Intel Core Ultra 5 338H

8

4.7 Ghz

18

10

Intel Arc B390/Pro B390

Intel Core Ultra 5 336H

12

4.6 Ghz

18

4

Intel graphics

Intel Core Ultra 5 335

12

4.6 Ghz

12

4

Intel graphics

Intel Core Ultra 5 325

8

4.5 Ghz

12

4

Intel graphics

Intel Core Ultra 5 332

8

4.4 Ghz

12

2

Intel graphics

Intel Core Ultra 5 322

8

4.4 Ghz

12

2

Intel graphics

Outlook

Intel Panther Lake

(Image credit: Future)

Since we already had a look at the new Panther Lake chips and knew they'd be launched at CES 2026, what I was really hoping to learn today is their specs and how much they'll cost.

So I got half of what I wanted, and for now, that's enough. I expect we'll start to see pre-order prices for laptops packing the new Intel Core Ultra Series 3 going live this week, and since the first laptops are slated to hit store shelves by January 27, we'll have a much clearer view of the pricing by the end of the month.

Given how volatile prices on laptops and components have been over the last year, I don't have high hopes that we'll see low prices on Panther Lake silicon. But I am hopeful that we're going to see some meaningfully better performance across a wide variety of Windows laptops, from dedicated gaming laptops sporting the Intel Core Ultra X9 and X7 chips to ultraportable business laptops that can achieve 20+ hours of battery life in our tests.

Of course, we'll have to wait until we can get a few new Panther Lake laptops into our testing lab — stay tuned!


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Alex Wawro
Senior Editor Computing

Alex Wawro is a lifelong tech and games enthusiast with more than a decade of experience covering both for outlets like Game Developer, Black Hat, and PC World magazine. A lifelong PC builder, he currently serves as a senior editor at Tom's Guide covering all things computing, from laptops and desktops to keyboards and mice. 

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