Featuring a 64bit quadcore Arm CortexA76 processor running at 2.4GHz Raspberry Pi 5 delivers a 2–3× increase in CPU performance relative to Raspberry Pi 4. Alongside a substantial uplift in graphics performance from an 800MHz VideoCore VII GPU; dual 4Kp60 display output over HDMI; and stateoftheart camera support from a rearchitected Raspberry Pi Image Signal Processor it provides a smooth desktop experience for consumers and opens the door to new applications for industrial customers.
For the first time this is a fullsize Raspberry Pi computer using silicon built inhouse at Raspberry Pi. The RP1 “southbridge” provides the bulk of the I/O capabilities for Raspberry Pi 5 and delivers a step change in peripheral performance and functionality. Aggregate USB bandwidth is more than doubled yielding faster transfer speeds to external UAS drives and other highspeed peripherals; the dedicated twolane 1Gbps MIPI camera and display interfaces present on earlier models have been replaced by a pair of fourlane 1.5Gbps MIPI transceivers tripling total bandwidth and supporting any combination of up to two cameras or displays; peak SD card performance is doubled through support for the SDR104 highspeed mode; and for the first time the platform exposes a singlelane PCI Express 2.0 interface providing support for highbandwidth peripherals.
2.4GHz quadcore 64bit Arm CortexA76 CPU with cryptography extensions 512KB percore L2 caches and a 2MB shared L3 cache
Features
VideoCore VII GPU supporting OpenGL ES 3.1 Vulkan 1.2
Dual 4Kp60 HDMI® display output with HDR support
4Kp60 HEVC decoder
LPDDR4X4267 SDRAM 4GB
Dualband 802.11ac WiFi
Bluetooth 5.0 / Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE)
microSD card slot with support for highspeed SDR104 mode
2 × USB 3.0 ports supporting simultaneous 5Gbps operation
2 × USB 2.0 ports
Gigabit Ethernet with PoE+ support (requires separate PoE+ HAT)
2 × 4lane MIPI camera/display transceivers
PCIe 2.0 x1 interface for fast peripherals (requires separate M.2 HAT or other adapter)
5V/5A DC power via USBC with Power Delivery support
Raspberry Pi standard 40pin header
Realtime clock (RTC) powered from external battery
Power button