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Cinebench 2026: Benchmark therapy

Cinebench 2026 updates the classic benchmark with full GPU support and new SMT tests. Time to see if your workstation is still worth its power bill.

For those who don’t know the tool: Cinebench by Maxon has long been the go-to CPU and GPU benchmark for 3D professionals. It’s based on the Redshift rendering engine that powers Cinema 4D, and its scores have quietly dictated workstation builds across postproduction, VFX, and colour suites for years.

Updated guts for a new generation

Maxon’s official release confirms that Cinebench 2026 has been rebuilt around the latest Redshift core, mirroring the renderer inside Cinema 4D 2026. The test scenes and compiler base have been modernised to reflect current rendering workloads. As a result, scores from Cinebench 2026 are not comparable with those from Cinebench 2024 or earlier. Cinebench 2026 runs natively on Windows x86-64, Windows ARM64, and macOS. It remains free to download from Maxon’s website.

GPU support: Blackwell, Hopper, and Apple M5

The new benchmark now fully supports Nvidia’s Blackwell-series GPUs, including GeForce 5000 and Hopper cards, and AMD’s Radeon 9000 series. For Mac users, Cinebench 2026 is compatible with Apple M4 and M5 chips, using Apple’s unified memory architecture. Intel GPUs remain unsupported, according to Maxon’s documentation. GPU tests require at least 8 GB of VRAM (or 16 GB of unified memory on Apple Silicon), and the CPU tests scale with available system memory.

New SMT test: threading laid bare

A new SMT (Simultaneous Multithreading) test isolates logical-thread performance, showing how modern CPUs handle parallel workloads. This separates Cinebench 2026 from prior versions, which measured only total core performance. The result gives a clearer view of per-thread efficiency, especially relevant for render nodes and multi-core workstation CPUs.

Real-world alignment with Redshift

Maxon emphasises that Cinebench 2026 now uses the same Redshift code as Cinema 4D’s production renderer, making the benchmark a closer reflection of actual 3D rendering performance. This move should reduce the gap between synthetic test scores and real-world frame render times inside DCC applications.

That said, as always, benchmark results should be validated in actual production environments before being used for purchase or deployment decisions.

Availability and notes for cautious studios

Cinebench 2026 is available now, free of charge, from Maxon’s official site. The installer covers Windows 10/11 (x86-64 and ARM64) and macOS 14.7 or newer. While the tool’s interface remains largely unchanged, the new test scenes and threading evaluation mean you’ll need fresh baselines for every workstation in your pipeline. Studios that have not updated since Cinebench R23 or 2024 will find their old score sheets effectively obsolete.

Given the tight budgets and cautious upgrade cycles across post and VFX, this update serves both as a wake-up call and as free therapy for outdated benchmarking habits. Social media: Cinebench 2026 drops with GPU and SMT upgrades. Time to see if your workstation’s still earning its power bill.

Fact check reminder: Test new benchmarks on your own hardware before using results to guide workstation or render-node purchases.