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This article presents Intel Products segment revenue, consisting of Client Computing Group (CCG) and Data Center and Artificial Intelligence (DCAI).
Let’s look at the breakdowns!
For other key statistics of Intel, you may find more resources on these pages:
R&D vs Peers
Profit Margin vs Peers
Please use the table of contents to navigate this page.
Table Of Contents
Definitions And Overview
- Operating Segment Update
- Client Computing Group (CCG)
- Data Center and Artificial Intelligence (DCAI)
Insight & Summary of Observed Trends
Z1. Insight & Summary of Intel Products Revenue and Profit Margin
Products Revenue Statistics
A1. CCG and DCAI Revenue
A2. CCG and DCAI Revenue Growth
A3. CCG and DCAI Profit Margin
Reference, Credits, and Disclosure
S1. References and Credits
S2. Disclosure
Definitions
To help readers understand the content better, the following terms and glossaries have been provided.
Operating Segment Update: In Q1 2025, Intel made an organizational change to integrate NEX into CCG and DCAI and modified its segment reporting to align to this and certain other business reorganizations.
Client Computing Group (CCG): CCG delivers platforms and processors that power PCs and edge devices, enabling enhanced performance, connectivity and user experiences for consumer and commercial markets with capabilities that also support retail, industrial robotics and AI ecosystems at the edge.
CCG’s direct customers include distributors and OEMs that design and sell PCs and related devices. CCG’s primary competitor is AMD, which also designs processors based on the x86 architecture.
CCG also faces significant competition from companies that design processors based on the ARM architecture, such as Apple with its M series products, Qualcomm with its Snapdragon products and MediaTek with its Kompanio products.
Data Center and Artificial Intelligence (DCAI): DCAI delivers workload-optimized solutions based upon our x86 architecture for data centers, including CPUs, AI accelerators, NICs, IPUs and custom ASICs, enabling performance and scalability for cloud, enterprise, telecommunication and HPC environments.
DCAI’s direct customers include global CSP/hyperscalers and OEMs. OEM customers, in turn, sell to multinational corporations, small- and medium-sized enterprises, independent hardware and software vendors, systems integrators, communications service providers and government entities.
DCAI competitors include AMD, which utilizes the x86 architecture and competes with DCAI across the full spectrum of CPUs, GPUs, accelerators and other products.
Other competitors include providers of GPU systems such as NVIDIA, whose GPU systems have experienced the highest demand in the market as AI workloads have become the dominant source of compute demand.
In addition, competitors developing their own custom silicon, including many hyperscalers such as Amazon, Google, Meta and Microsoft; and both new entrants and incumbents developing ARM- and RISC-V-based products tailored to specific data center and AI workloads.
DCAI also competes with Broadcom in the custom ASICs development market.
Insight & Summary of Intel Products Revenue and Profit Margin
The following analysis consolidates the trends observed across Intel’s Products revenue, revenue mix, YoY growth, and profit margin for the 2023–2025 period.
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CCG (Client Computing Group) remains the dominant revenue contributor, consistently accounting for ~66–67% of product sales, though its growth trajectory has softened, turning negative in 2025.
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DCAI (Data Center and AI) has steadily increased its share to 34% by 2025, reflecting stronger momentum and strategic importance.
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Profitability trends highlight the divergence between segments. CCG delivered consistently high operating margins in the 29–35% range, underscoring its role as Intel’s profit anchor despite slowing growth.
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DCAI, while historically lower-margin, expanded sharply from 5.9% in 2023 to 20.2% in 2025, signaling improving efficiency and scale in AI-driven workloads.
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Overall, Intel’s product portfolio shows a gradual shift toward DCAI as a growth driver, while CCG remains the margin leader.
The table below combines all key revenue metrics — revenue magnitude ($M), mix (%), growth (%), and profit margin — into a single view for the latest three fiscal years.
Intel Products Segment Consolidated Metrics 3-Year Averages (FY2023–2025)
| Metric | CCG (Avg) | DCAI (Avg) | Total Products (Avg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue & Mix | |||
| Revenue ($ Millions) | $32,626.33 | $16,341.33 | $48,967.67 |
| Revenue Mix (%) | 66.63% | 33.37% | 100.00% |
| Revenue Growth (%)* | -0.10% | 2.90% | 0.90% |
| Operating Profit & Margin | |||
| Operating Profit ($ Millions) | $10,346.33 | $1,927.00 | $12,273.33 |
| Operating Margin (%) | 31.70% | 11.63% | 25.03% |
*Note: Growth rates represent the average of the two available periods (FY2024-2025).
CCG and DCAI Revenue
Intel Products is comprised of two operating segments: CCG and DCAI. The definitions of these segments are available here: CCG and DCAI.
Intel Products Revenue & Mix 3-Year Averages (FY2023–2025)
| Metric | CCG (Avg) | DCAI (Avg) | Total Products (Avg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue ($ Millions) | $32,626.33 | $16,341.33 | $48,967.67 |
| Revenue Mix (%) | 66.63% | 33.37% | 100.00% |
CCG and DCAI Revenue Growth
Intel Products is comprised of two operating segments: CCG and DCAI. The definitions of these segments are available here: CCG and DCAI.
Intel Products Revenue Growth Averages (FY2024–2025)
| Metric | CCG (Avg) | DCAI (Avg) | Total Products (Avg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue Growth (%) | -0.10% | 2.90% | 0.90% |
CCG and DCAI Profit Margin
Intel Products is comprised of two operating segments: CCG and DCAI. The definitions of these segments are available here: CCG and DCAI.
Intel Products Profitability 3-Year Averages (FY2023–2025)
| Metric | CCG (Avg) | DCAI (Avg) | Total Products (Avg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operating Profit ($ Millions) | $10,346.33 | $1,927.00 | $12,273.33 |
| Operating Margin (%) | 31.70% | 11.63% | 25.03% |
References and Credits
1. All financial figures presented were obtained and referenced from Inte’s quarterly and annual reports published on the company’s investor relations page: Intel Annual Reports.
2. Pexels Images.
Disclosure
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