Intel Core Ultra 5 250K Plus Review

The Intel Core Ultra 5 250K Plus is part of Intel's "Arrow Lake Refresh" (Core Ultra 200S Plus) family, launched on March 26, 2026 alongside the Core Ultra 7 270K Plus.

Joshua James  •  July 13, 2026

Intel Core Ultra 5 250K Plus Review
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Intel Core Ultra 5 250K Plus

The Core Ultra 5 250K Plus is a strong $200 CPU: it beats AMD's Ryzen 5 9600X in productivity by a wide margin while staying essentially even in gaming. Paired with a B860 board, you get a sensible, budget-friendly LGA 1851 platform — you lose CPU overclocking headroom, but that's not this chip's purpose anyway.

THE GOOD
  • Excellent multi-threaded and productivity performance for the price
  • Meaningful gaming uplift over the 245K
  • Competitive with, or ahead of, the Ryzen 5 9600X in most workloads
  • Efficient power delivery relative to performance gained
  • Pairs naturally with affordable B860 boards
THE BAD
  • Binary Optimization Tool has limited game support at launch
  • LGA 1851's long-term upgrade path is less certain than AM5

Overview

Intel’s Core Ultra 200S Plus lineup, better known as the Arrow Lake Refresh, exists to answer a question the company has been dodging for over a year: can Arrow Lake actually compete at the price points that matter most? The Core Ultra 5 250K Plus, launched at $199, is Intel’s clearest answer yet. Paired with a B860 motherboard — a chipset built for exactly this kind of budget-conscious build — it makes a compelling case as one of the best value CPUs on the market right now.

Design and Platform

The Core Ultra 5 250K Plus isn’t a simple clock-speed bump — it’s a genuine reconfiguration of the Arrow Lake die. Intel has carried over the 6 Lion Cove performance cores from the Core Ultra 5 245K but added four extra Skymont efficiency cores, bringing the total to 18 threads across 6P+12E. That’s paired with a larger 30MB L3 cache (up from 24MB) and a die-to-die interconnect clocked nearly 50% higher than before. On paper, this is a noticeably beefier chip than the 245K it replaces, at a lower price.

Power delivery stays conservative: 125W base and 159W maximum turbo, identical to its predecessor. That headroom, combined with the platform’s efficient TSMC 3nm compute tile, is what allows the extra cores and cache to be added without pushing thermals or power draw meaningfully higher.

Specifications

SpecDetail
Cores/Threads6 P-cores (Lion Cove) + 12 E-cores (Skymont), 18 threads
Cache30MB L3 (up from 24MB on the 245K)
P-core clocks4.2GHz base / 5.3GHz boost
E-core clocks3.3GHz base / 4.6GHz boost
TDP125W base / 159W max turbo
SocketLGA 1851
MemoryDDR5, natively 6400 MT/s; higher speeds via XMP depending on board
Price~$199–$220

Compared to the 245K, the 250K Plus adds 4 extra E-cores, 6MB more L3 cache, and a faster die-to-die interconnect (3.00GHz vs 2.10GHz), while keeping the same power envelope.

Gaming Performance

The story here is consistent across independent testing: the 250K Plus roughly matches, or slightly edges out, the Ryzen 5 9600X.

  • Average gaming performance lands around 1–3% ahead of the 9600X, and roughly 9% ahead of the outgoing 245K.
  • It sits about 4% behind the pricier Ryzen 7 9700X, but comes in close to the Core Ultra 9 285K and Core i5-14600K in several titles.
  • In individual games, margins swing further — gains of 10–20%+ over the 9600X and 245K have been observed depending on the title.
  • Intel’s optional “Binary Optimization Tool” adds an extra boost in supported titles, though only a handful are covered at launch.

Individual titles show a wider spread, which is typical for CPU-bound testing:

Gamevs Ryzen 5 9600Xvs Core Ultra 5 245K
Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty+10%+10%
Doom: The Dark Ages+12%+4.7%
Marvel Rivals+12–15%+18%
The Outer Worlds 2+24%
Baldur’s Gate 3Even, stronger 1% lows+29%
Borderlands 4+4%

Bottom line: gaming gains over the 245K are real but modest; against the 9600X it’s close to a toss-up, with Intel usually slightly ahead.

Intel Core Ultra 5 250K Plus Review

Productivity Performance

This is where the 250K Plus stands out. In application workloads, it runs roughly 30% faster than the 9600X on average, beats even the older Core i7-14700K, and lands just 6% behind the pricier Core Ultra 7 265K. In compression benchmarks specifically, leads over the 9600X of 45–70%+ have been recorded, along with a healthy lead over the Core i5-14600K. Power efficiency also improved over the previous generation: roughly 7% more power draw than the 245K buys about 25% more multi-threaded performance.

Pairing with a B860 Motherboard

The ROG STRIX B860-G GAMING WIFI chipset is a natural fit for this CPU:

  • No CPU overclocking — B860 doesn’t support it, but the 250K Plus isn’t really an overclocker’s chip anyway; some boards allow memory (RAM) overclocking.
  • DMI connection: 4×4.0 lanes to the CPU (vs. 8×4.0 on Z890), which rarely bottlenecks real-world use at this tier.
  • Memory: native DDR5-6400, with many boards supporting 8000+ MT/s via XMP.
  • Connectivity: expect PCIe 5.0 x16 for the GPU, one PCIe 5.0 M.2 slot plus several 4.0 slots, and Thunderbolt 4 support on boards that include it.
  • Pricing: B860 boards start around $99–$150, keeping the whole platform well under $400 with the CPU included.

Popular boards like the ROG STRIX B860-G GAMING WIFI have handled the 250K Plus’s 159W turbo power comfortably in testing, with solid VRM thermals and no stability issues reported.

Intel Core Ultra 5 250K Plus Review
Intel Core Ultra 5 250K Plus Review

Verdict

The Core Ultra 5 250K Plus is the most convincing budget CPU Intel has released in this generation. It doesn’t chase the gaming crown, but it doesn’t need to — at $199, its productivity performance alone justifies the price, and its gaming performance is close enough to AMD’s equivalent that the choice comes down to platform preference rather than a clear performance gap. Paired with a B860 motherboard, it’s a well-matched, budget-friendly foundation for a build that leans toward both gaming and everyday multi-core work.

Recommended for: budget builders, upgraders from older Intel platforms, and anyone whose workload mixes gaming with productivity tasks.

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