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URL: https://willitrunai.com/can-run/bge-m3-on-rtx-5090-32gb

⇱ Can BGE M3 Run on RTX 5090 32GB? YES (6.7/32.0GB)


Can BGE M3 run on RTX 5090 32GB?

YES — Runs Great

A75Great
Estimated from fit model

BGE M3 needs ~6.7 GB VRAM. RTX 5090 32GB has 32.0 GB. With F16 quantization, expect ~8 tok/s.

Runtime: OllamaCapacity: RoomyBandwidth: HighStack: BasicBottleneck: Memory bandwidth
Share:

Operating mode

Choose the run profile you care about

Interactive favors responsiveness, while light API and scale-out lean harder on serving readiness. The fit stays the same, but the recommendation lens changes.

Current mode

Balanced

Balanced for general local use. Keeps the ranking neutral across personal and serving workflows.

Capabilities:

Select quantization to explore

F16 (Maximum quality) — 6.7 GB, 8.0 tok/s, Runs well
6.7 GB required32.0 GB available
21% VRAM used

Fit status

Runs well

Decode

8.0 tok/s

TTFT

24346 ms

Safe context

8K

Memory

6.7 GB / 32.0 GB

Memory breakdown

Weights1.2 GB
KV Cache1.1 GB
Runtime1.2 GB
Headroom3.2 GB

See how fast it feels

See how fast it feelsBGE M3 on RTX 5090 32GB
1st promptCold start — includes initialization
>What is local AI inference?
Local AI inference means running an AI language model directly on your own hardware — your laptop, desktop, or server — instead of sending requests to a remote cloud API. When you run inference locally the model weights are loaded into your GPU or unified memory. Each token you generate requires reading those weights from memory, so memory bandwidth is the main bottleneck for decode speed. Key benefits of running locally: - Full privacy: your prompts never leave your machine - No per-token cost or rate limits - Works offline once the model is downloaded - Latency depends only on your hardware
2nd promptWarm — model ready, no init overhead
>How much VRAM do I need?
It depends on the model size and quantization level. A rough rule of thumb: Model size Q4 (4-bit) Q8 (8-bit) FP16 7B params ~4.3 GB ~7.5 GB ~14 GB 13B params ~7.9 GB ~13.9 GB ~26 GB 70B params ~42.7 GB ~74.9 GB ~140 GB Most people use 4-bit quantization (Q4_K_M) which gives 90-95% of full quality at a fraction of the memory. A 24 GB GPU can comfortably run most 7B-13B models.
Estimated: 8.0 tok/s decode · 24.3s TTFT (warm) · 20 tok/s prefill

What limits this setup

This setup is broadly balanced for this model.

No major red flags

This recommendation has enough memory headroom and acceptable estimated speed for the selected workload.

Best improvement path

Performance by workload

WorkloadGradeFitDecodeTTFTContext
ChatARuns well8.0 tok/s13280 ms8K
CodingARuns well8.0 tok/s24346 ms8K
Agentic CodingARuns well8.0 tok/s35412 ms8K
ReasoningARuns well8.0 tok/s28773 ms8K
RAGARuns well8.0 tok/s44266 ms8K

Quantization options

How BGE M3 (0.5680000185966492B params) fits at each quantization level on RTX 5090 32GB (32.0 GB usable).

QuantBitsVRAMQualityFit
Q2_K
2
0.2 GB
LowA78
Q3_K_S
3
0.3 GB
LowA78
NVFP4
4
0.3 GB
MediumA78
Q4_K_M
4
0.3 GB
MediumA78
Q5_K_M
5
0.4 GB
HighA78
Q6_K
6
0.5 GB
HighA78
Q8_0
8
0.6 GB
Very HighA79
F16Best for your GPU
16
1.2 GB
MaximumA79

Get started

Copy-paste commands to run BGE M3 on your machine.

Run

docker run --rm -it ghcr.io/ggerganov/llama.cpp:full \ --hf-repo "BAAI/bge-m3" \ --hf-file "bge-m3-F16.gguf" \ -c 4096 -ngl 99

Your hardware

More models your RTX 5090 32GB can run

ModelParamsGradeDecodeCapabilities
👁 Alibaba
Qwen3-Coder 30B A3B Instruct
30.5BS181.6 tok/s
👁 Alibaba
Qwen 3.5 27B
27BS78.7 tok/s
👁 Alibaba
Qwen 3.6 27B
27BS79 tok/s
👁 Alibaba
Qwen 3.6 35B A3B
35BS128.2 tok/s
👁 Alibaba
Qwen3-VL 30B A3B Instruct
30BS187.8 tok/s

Frequently asked questions

See all results for RTX 5090 32GBSee all hardware for BGE M3