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RTX 4000 Ada vs A4000

Explore a head to head comparison of specifications, performance, and pricing.

RTX 4000 Ada

The NVIDIA RTX 4000 Ada delivers high-performance computing capabilities for AI, machine learning, and data science applications.

ManufacturerNVIDIA
GPU Architecture
Average Price$0.79/hr
GPU VRAM20 GB
Cloud Availability1 clouds
System Memory32 GB
CPU Cores8
Storage500 GB

A4000

The NVIDIA A4000 delivers high-performance computing capabilities for AI, machine learning, and data science applications.

ManufacturerNVIDIA
GPU Architecture
Average Price$1.17/hr
GPU VRAM16 GB
Cloud Availability2 clouds
System Memory215 GB
CPU Cores56
Storage1.3 TB

RTX 4000 Ada vs A4000: Which Should You Choose?

The RTX 4000 Ada offers 20 GB of VRAM — 1.3× the 16 GB on the A4000 — making it better suited for large model workloads that require holding more parameters in GPU memory. On FP16 throughput, the RTX 4000 Ada delivers 26.73 TFLOPS versus 19.17 TFLOPS on the A4000 — 1.4× faster for mixed-precision training and inference. Memory bandwidth favors the A4000 at 0.45 TB/s compared to 0.36 TB/s on the RTX 4000 Ada, which directly impacts inference latency for memory-bandwidth-bound models. Architecturally, the RTX 4000 Ada is built on Ada Lovelace while the A4000 uses Ampere, reflecting different generational capabilities and optimizations. On Shadeform, the A4000 starts from $0.15/hr versus $0.79/hr for the RTX 4000 Ada — 427% more expensive — reflecting the performance premium. The A4000 is available across 2 cloud providers on Shadeform compared to 1 for the RTX 4000 Ada, giving more options for region and pricing flexibility.

RTX 4000 Ada — Best Use Cases

  • LLM inference and model serving
  • Image generation and diffusion models
  • Smaller fine-tuning runs
  • Cost-efficient GPU compute

Choose RTX 4000 Ada when:

  • You need 20 GB+ VRAM for large models or long context windows
  • Maximum performance justifies the higher cost
  • You are training large models or running high-throughput inference
  • Your preferred provider already has availability

A4000 — Best Use Cases

  • General-purpose deep learning training
  • Fine-tuning models up to 13B parameters
  • AI inference at moderate throughput
  • Computer vision and NLP workloads

Choose A4000 when:

  • 16 GB VRAM is sufficient for your workload
  • Cost efficiency is your primary concern
  • Your workload does not require peak FP16 throughput
  • You need flexibility across multiple cloud providers or regions

See how the RTX 4000 Ada & A4000 compare

Compare detailed hardware specifications and average pricing for the RTX 4000 Ada and A4000.

Compare Hardware Specifications

RTX 4000 AdaA4000
GPU Type
RTX 4000 Ada
A4000
VRAM per GPU
20 GB
16 GB
Manufacturer
NVIDIA
NVIDIA
Architecture
Ada Lovelace
Ampere
Interconnect
PCIe Gen4
PCIe Gen4
Memory Bandwidth
360 GB/s
448 GB/s
FP16 TFLOPS
26.73 TFLOPS (1:1)
19.17 TFLOPS (1:1)
CUDA Cores
6144
6144
Tensor Cores
192 (4th Gen)
192 (3rd Gen)
RT Cores
48 (3rd Gen)
48 (2nd Gen)
Base Clock
1500 MHz
735 MHz
Boost Clock
2175 MHz
1695 MHz
TDP
130W
140W
Process Node
TSMC 4N
TSMC 8nm
Data Formats
FP8, INT8, BF16, FP16, TF32, FP32
INT8, BF16, FP16, TF32, FP32

Compare Average On-Demand Pricing

RTX 4000 AdaA4000
1 GPU
$0.79 /hr
$0.47 /hr
2 GPUs
N/A
$0.95 /hr
4 GPUs
N/A
$1.90 /hr
8 GPUs
N/A
$1.20 /hr

Frequently Asked Questions: RTX 4000 Ada vs A4000

The main differences are VRAM (20 GB vs 16 GB), FP16 throughput (26.73 vs 19.17 TFLOPS), architecture (Ada Lovelace vs Ampere). The RTX 4000 Ada uses the Ada Lovelace architecture while the A4000 is based on Ampere, giving each GPU different generational capabilities.

The RTX 4000 Ada is generally better for large language model training due to its higher throughput and 20 GB of VRAM, which allows fitting larger models or larger batch sizes in a single pass. For smaller models or fine-tuning tasks where cost matters more, both GPUs can be effective.

On Shadeform, the A4000 is available from $0.15/hr. The RTX 4000 Ada starts from $0.79/hr. Prices vary by provider, region, and contract length. Reserved commitments can reduce hourly costs significantly compared to on-demand pricing.

The RTX 4000 Ada has more VRAM at 20 GB, compared to 16 GB on the A4000. Higher VRAM allows you to run larger models without quantization, use longer context windows, and process larger batch sizes — all of which improve throughput and reduce latency for memory-bound workloads.

Based on TFLOPS per dollar, the A4000 offers better raw compute value at current Shadeform on-demand rates. However, the best choice depends on your specific workload — if you need the extra VRAM or throughput of the RTX 4000 Ada, paying the premium may be justified by faster job completion and lower total cost.

The A4000 is currently available across 2 cloud providers on Shadeform's network, compared to 1 for the RTX 4000 Ada. Shadeform lets you deploy either GPU across all available providers from a single platform, so you can always find available capacity without manually checking each cloud.

Mixing different GPU types in a single training cluster is generally not recommended, as it creates performance bottlenecks where faster GPUs wait for slower ones. For best results, use a homogeneous cluster of either RTX 4000 Ada or A4000. Shadeform supports on-demand clusters of up to 64 GPUs of the same type with no commitment required.

Explore RTX 4000 Ada & A4000 Instances

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