Skip to main content

How to use AMD Smart Access Memory and Nvidia Resizable BAR

Lisa Su, the CEO of AMD, pictured holding an AMD Radeon RX 6900 XT graphics card.
AMD

We recently covered the technical background of Nvidia’s Resizable BAR (Base Address Register) and AMD’s Smart Access Memory, so now it’s time to dig in and explain how you use these technologies.

Although they achieve the same sort of goal of giving the CPU far greater access to game assets for faster allocation, the process for enabling these technologies is slightly different. Let's go over the AMD method and the Nvidia method, along with what you should know.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

30 minutes

What You Need

  • Intel 10th-generation or Ryzen 3000 CPU or newer

  • AMD or Nvidia graphics card

Get the right components for AMD Smart Access Memory

To take advantage of Smart Access Memory (SAM), you need the following:

In other words, you need AMD hardware from end to end, and very recent hardware at that. Reports indicate that Intel Arc graphics cards support resizable BAR on Ryzen PCs, and Intel recently confirmed it, though it hasn't seen much real-world testing.

Enable AMD Smart Access Memory

Step 1: Update the BIOS on your motherboard to the latest version — download it from your manufacturer’s website.

AMD Radeon home page.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 2: Install the latest graphics driver from AMD’s driver repository.

Step 3: Enter the UEFI/BIOS by pressing your board’s specific key during startup.

Step 4: Enable two settings for Above 4G decoding and Re-Size BAR support. In the BIOS of our Asus TUF Gaming X570-Plus motherboard, we found Asus had inserted a simple button that changed both settings together. Your motherboard may differ, so if in doubt, look up your board's manual to find the setting you need to change.

Asus Resizable BAR settings.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 5: Save your changes, exit the BIOS, and head into Windows 10.

Saving BIOS changes in Asus.
DigitalTrends

Step 6: As an aside, if you glance back to the AMD web page, you will note it includes a BIOS screenshot that refers to Resizeable BAR Support, so while we might prefer the name Smart Access Memory, it may be that Resizable BAR is the more enduring terminology.

Enable Resizable BAR

Nvidia also provides full details to guide you through the process of enabling Resizable BAR, but it is dealing with more permutations than AMD, so you need to proceed with some caution. It is interesting to note that Nvidia supports older AMD 400 motherboards but not AMD 3000 CPUs.

To use Resizable BAR with a Nvidia GPU, you need:

  • AMD 400 or 500 series motherboard with Ryzen 5000 CPU or an Intel 10th-, 11th-, or 12th-generation CPU and corresponding motherboard

  • Am Nvidia GeForce RTX 30 graphics card or Intel Arc graphics card

Step 1: Update the BIOS on your motherboard BIOS to the latest version — download it from the manufacturer’s website.

Step 2: Install the latest graphics driver from Nvidia’s website.

Step 3: Enter the UEFI/BIOS by pressing your board’s specific key during startup.

VGA BIOS Update notification.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 4: If you're running an older RTX 3000 GPU, you may need to update your GPU BIOS to get access to the ReBAR feature. Most recent GPU releases shouldn't have any trouble however. If you find that you can't enable ReBAR when having followed this guide, consult your GPU manufacturer's website for instructions on how to update to the latest BIOS.

VGA BIOS Update Finished notification.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 5: Check your Nvidia or Intel drivers to confirm that Resizable BAR has been enabled.

Nvidia showing Resizable BAR enabled.
Digital Trends

Should I enable Resizable BAR?

If you have an Intel GPU, the answer is most definitely yes. Our review showed that this is an absolute must-use feature — otherwise, you are hamstringing your GPU performance.

For AMD and Nvidia graphics cards, this isn't so important, as the performance difference is often somewhere between 1% and 10%. It is, however, free performance, so while you don't have to enable it, you probably should, as otherwise you're just leaving additional frames on the table.

Leo Waldock
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Leo has been reviewing PC hardware for 20+ years. Always PC, never Mac. He writes in British English and considers the word…
AMD missed its shot for the top
Lisa Su, the CEO of AMD, pictured holding an AMD Radeon RX 6900 XT graphics card.

There's an unfortunate irony in the world of PC gaming right now. As soon as AMD decided to concede the flagship battle to Nvidia, Team Green put out what might be its most disappointing flagship offering in a decade in the form of the RTX 5080.

Each generation, we talk about the dynamic between AMD and Nvidia. And for close to a decade now, there's been a linear progression between the two brands. AMD originally focused on budget offerings to undercut Nvidia's mainstream range, but it slowly built up power each generation to eventually contest what Nvidia was able to do at a flagship level. We got two generations of a true, one-to-one battle between AMD and Nvidia. And right when AMD was about to get a leg up, it decided to drop for the count.
One step behind

Read more
AMD may still wait for Nvidia before unleashing RDNA 4
Various AMD RX 9000 series graphics cards.

AMD's future best graphics cards should be right around the corner, but with no specifics, it's hard to say when exactly we'll reach that particular corner. However, a new leak from the Chiphell forum implies that whatever release date AMD may have had in mind for its RX 9000 series GPUs may have changed. The most interesting part is that the leaker implies Nvidia may have played a part in this decision.

Before we dive in, remember that all of this is speculation. During its CES 2025 keynote, AMD barely spoke about RDNA 4, so the release dates are a mystery. Some leakers repeated a rumored release date of January 23 in the past few days, though, and according to Napoleon on the Chiphell forums, that may no longer be true.

Read more
Here’s how Nvidia’s CEO defends the RTX 5090’s $2,000 price tag
Nvidia's RTX 5090 sitting at CES 2025.

"When someone would like to have the best, they just go for the best," said Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang in a Q&A session with media at CES 2025. Huang was speaking on the newly-announced RTX 5090, and its new price tag of $2,000, making it the most expensive desktop graphics card Nvidia has ever released.

It's a new high for Nvidia, but also a bold departure from the rest of the range. The next card down in Nvidia's stack, the RTX 5080, comes in at $1,000 -- half the price of the flagship. Huang suggested that customers don't want to deal in micro-segmentation minutia. "$2,000 is not small money, it's fairly high value," Huang said. "But a lot of customers, they just absolutely want the best."

Read more