News · 18 Jun 2026 · Daniel Reid
You can now buy a Framework Laptop 16 RTX 5070 graphics module on its own, in pounds, VAT included, with no whole-laptop purchase and no US import faff. Framework confirmed the part on its blog on 27 April 2026, and on 17 June 2026 the UK store at frame.work/gb lists it as a standalone upgrade. This is the headline: a discrete GPU you slot into a chassis you already own, priced for the UK and shipped to the UK.
“We’re continuing to live up to graphics upgradeability in a laptop, now with our third discrete GPU option,” said Nirav Patel, CEO of Framework, in the 27 April 2026 announcement. The 5070 is the third discrete option for the Laptop 16 and is backwards-compatible with the existing second-generation chassis. No new laptop required.
Key facts
- New RTX 5070 12GB GDDR7 module, Framework’s third discrete GPU for the Laptop 16, backwards-compatible with the second-gen chassis (Framework blog, 27 April 2026).
- UK pricing on frame.work/gb (17 June 2026): 8GB module £699, 12GB module £1,199.
- The 12GB is Pre-order Batch 3, ships around August 2026, with a £100 refundable deposit.
- Blackwell architecture, roughly 100W sustained TGP, about 30 to 40 per cent uplift over the older RX 7700S module.
- This is a module sold alone, in GBP inc VAT, direct from frame.work/gb. Not a new laptop.
The UK buy maths
Two numbers matter on frame.work/gb: the 8GB module at £699 and the 12GB module at £1,199. Both are bought outright as parts, both drop into an existing Laptop 16, and both arrive without the customs charges and currency-conversion guesswork that have long made US-priced upgrades a gamble for British buyers. The 12GB sits in Pre-order Batch 3 with an August 2026 ship window and a £100 refundable deposit, so you are reserving rather than paying in full today.

That standalone-part framing is the whole point of the platform. Where a Razer Blade 16 review or an Asus ProArt P16 review ends with you replacing the entire machine to chase a faster GPU, Framework asks you to replace one component. The 8GB at £699 is the sensible default for most owners. The 12GB at £1,199 is the considered upgrade, and the gap between them is where the real decision lives.
Is the £500 jump for 4GB worth it
Here is what they are not telling you in the launch copy: PC Guide flagged that the 12GB lands more than 70 per cent above the 8GB, and that £500 premium buys you exactly 4GB more VRAM. Not more cores you can lean on, not a meaningfully higher clock in everyday use. Four gigabytes. Whether that is money well spent depends entirely on whether your work is VRAM-bound.
For raster gaming, it largely is not. The extra VRAM rarely changes frame rates at the resolutions this class of laptop runs. For creators, the calculus flips. Large video timelines with multiple 4K or higher tracks, heavy colour work in DaVinci Resolve Studio, and complex 3D scenes will all spill past 8GB and start swapping, which tanks performance. If that is your day job, the 12GB is headroom you will actually use. If you mostly game and occasionally edit, the 8GB is the smarter £699.
Cross-shop it honestly. A creator weighing a sealed-box alternative might look at a MacBook Pro M5 Max vs M4 Max comparison, where unified memory sidesteps the VRAM ceiling entirely, or at Snapdragon X2 Elite laptops for battery-first editing. Framework’s pitch is different: you are buying into upgradeability, not a fixed spec.
Upgrade the chassis you own, or buy whole
If you already run a second-gen Laptop 16, the maths is clean: £699 or £1,199 for the module, and you are done. No new keyboard, no new screen, no migration. That backwards compatibility is the lever Framework keeps pulling, and it is the one thing rivals cannot answer, because a ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 14 or any sealed creator laptop is a fixed object the day you buy it.

If you do not own a Laptop 16 yet, the module price is only part of the bill. You are buying a whole machine plus the GPU you want, and at that point you should weigh the platform tax against a one-and-done rival. The upgrade story only pays off over years of ownership, especially with component prices unsettled, as our look at the 2026 memory-price squeeze set out. Buy in for the longevity, not the day-one value.
What to watch next
The date to circle is the Batch 3 ship window for the 12GB module, currently around August 2026. Watch whether Framework holds it, whether the £100 deposit converts cleanly at the listed £1,199, and whether stock of the cheaper 8GB tightens as Batch 3 deposits pile up. If you are VRAM-bound, the deposit reserves your place. If you are not, sit on the 8GB and keep an eye on the ship date before committing a penny more.
Buyer action
Where to buy or check next
Use this as the final check before ordering a phone, changing network or trusting a headline monthly price.


















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