Sizing a power supply around the RX 9070 is one of the easiest places for South African builders to either overspend or cut a corner that bites later. The honest answer depends on the whole card-plus-CPU draw, transient spikes, and headroom for a quiet, efficient fan curve.

Quick Answer

A 1000W unit is comfortably enough for a single-GPU RX 9070 build. The card's real-world draw plus a mainstream CPU sits well inside that figure, with the recommended sizing around 850W for comfortable transient headroom.

What 1000W Actually Covers

A RX 9070 typically pulls between roughly 120W and 320W under load depending on model and overclock. Add a modern 6 to 16 core CPU at 65W to 170W, plus 30W to 60W for drives, fans, RGB and the board, and a 1000W supply with an 80 PLUS Gold rating leaves the right cushion. Aim to sit around 50 to 70 percent load at the wall for the best efficiency and the quietest fan behaviour.

Transient spikes matter more than the average figure. Modern GPUs can briefly draw well above their rated power, so an ATX 3.1 unit with a native 12V-2x6 connector handles those millisecond spikes without tripping protection. If your 1000W choice is ATX 3.1 rated, the RX 9070 is well looked after.

Pick Quality Over Raw Wattage

Wattage is only half the story. A reputable 1000W Gold unit beats a no-name 1200W supply on rail stability, ripple and protection circuitry. For an SA build, prioritise a known brand, a 7 to 10 year warranty, and the right cable count for your RX 9070. Buying once at the right capacity is cheaper than replacing a unit that sags under load and corrupts a long gaming session.

FAQ

Is 1000W really enough for the RX 9070?

For a single-card build, 1000W in a quality Gold or better unit is comfortably enough. The card and a mainstream CPU stay inside that budget with room for transient spikes when the supply is ATX 3.1 rated.

What wattage does the RX 9070 need at minimum?

The practical recommendation lands around 850W for healthy headroom and quiet fans. Going lower can work on paper but leaves little margin for spikes, future upgrades, or a power-hungrier CPU.

Does ATX 3.1 matter for this build?

Yes. ATX 3.1 units handle the brief power excursions modern GPUs produce, and the native 12V-2x6 connector means no adapter clutter. It is the safer choice for a RX 9070 that you plan to keep for years.

Match a quality 1000W ATX 3.1 unit to your RX 9070 build, currently stocked at Evetech, and size it for 50 to 70 percent load for the quietest, most efficient result.