Form factor
|
Originated
|
Date
|
Max. size[info 1] width × depth
|
Notes (typical usage, Market adoption, etc.)
|
XT
|
IBM
|
1983
|
216 × 279 mm (8.5 × 11 in)
|
Obsolete, see Industry Standard Architecture. The IBM Personal Computer XT was the successor to the original IBM PC, its first home computer. As the specifications were open, many clone motherboards were produced and it became a de facto standard.
|
AT (Advanced Technology)
|
IBM
|
1984
|
305 × 279–330 mm (12 × 11–13 in)
|
Obsolete, see Industry Standard Architecture. Created by IBM for the IBM Personal Computer/AT, an Intel 80286 machine. Also known as Full AT, it was popular during the era of the Intel 80386 microprocessor. Superseded by ATX.
|
Baby-AT
|
IBM
|
1985
|
216 × 254–330 mm (8.5 × 10–13 in)
|
IBM's 1985 successor to the AT motherboard. Functionally equivalent to the AT, it became popular due to its significantly smaller size.
|
ATX
|
Intel
|
1995
|
305 × 244 mm (12 × 9.6 in)
|
Created by Intel in 1995. As of 2017,[update] it is the most popular form factor for commodity motherboards. Typical size is 9.6 × 12 in although some companies extend that to 10 × 12 in.
|
SSI CEB
|
SSI
|
?
|
305 × 267 mm (12 × 10.5 in)
|
Created by the Server System Infrastructure (SSI) forum. Derived from the EEB and ATX specifications. This means that SSI CEB motherboards have the same mounting holes and the same IO connector area as ATX motherboards.
|
SSI EEB
|
SSI
|
?
|
305 × 330 mm (12 × 13 in)
|
Created by the Server System Infrastructure (SSI) forum. Derived from the EEB and ATX specifications. This means that SSI CEB motherboards have the same mounting holes and the same IO connector area as ATX motherboards, but SSI EEB motherboards do not.
|
SSI MEB
|
SSI
|
?
|
411 × 330 mm (16.2 × 13 in)
|
Created by the Server System Infrastructure (SSI) forum. Derived from the EEB and ATX specifications.
|
microATX
|
Intel
|
1996
|
244 × 244 mm (9.6 × 9.6 in)
|
A 20 % shorter variant of the ATX form factor. Compatible with most ATX cases, but has fewer slots than ATX, for a smaller power supply unit. Very popular for desktop and small form factor computers as of 2017.[update]
|
Mini-ATX
|
AOpen
|
2005
|
150 × 150 mm (5.9 × 5.9 in)
|
Mini-ATX is considerably smaller than Micro-ATX. Mini-ATX motherboards were designed with MoDT (Mobile on Desktop Technology) which adapt mobile CPUs for lower power requirement, less heat generation and better application capability.
|
FlexATX
|
Intel
|
1999
|
228.6 × 190.5 mm max (9.0 × 7.5 in)
|
A subset of microATX developed by Intel in 1999. Allows more flexible motherboard design, component positioning and shape. Can be smaller than regular microATX.
|
Mini-ITX
|
VIA
|
2001
|
170 × 170 mm max (6.7 × 6.7 in)
|
A small, highly integrated form factor, designed for small devices such as thin clients and set-top boxes.
|
Nano-ITX
|
VIA
|
2003
|
120 × 120 mm (4.7 × 4.7 in)
|
Targeted at smart digital entertainment devices such as PVRs, set-top boxes, media centers and Car PCs, and thin devices.
|
Pico-ITX
|
VIA
|
2007
|
100 × 72 mm max (3.9 × 2.8 in)
|
|
Mobile-ITX
|
VIA
|
2007
|
75 × 45 mm (2.953 × 1.772 in)
|
|
Neo-ITX
|
VIA
|
2012
|
170 × 85 × 35 mm (6.69 × 3.33 × 1.38 in)
|
Used in the VIA Android PC
|
Deep Mini-ITX
|
ASRock Rack
|
?
|
170 × 208 mm max (6.7 × 8.2 in)
|
Proprietary Mini-ITX variant i.a. for more than two memory slots, designed for chassis with support for Micro-ATX size and above
|
Mini-STX
|
Intel
|
2015
|
147 × 140 mm (5.79 × 5.51 in)
|
Smaller than Mini-ITX, but bigger than the NUC, this board is used in small form factor computers, using a socketed intel core processor and SO-DIMMS.
|
BTX (Balanced Technology Extended)
|
Intel
|
2004
|
325 × 267 mm max (12.8 × 10.5 in)
|
A standard proposed by Intel as a successor to ATX in the early 2000s, according to Intel the layout has better cooling. BTX Boards are flipped in comparison to ATX Boards, so a BTX or MicroBTX Board needs a BTX case, while an ATX style board fits in an ATX case. The RAM slots and the PCI slots are parallel to each other.
Processor is placed closest to the fan. May contain a CNR board.
|
MicroBTX (or uBTX)
|
Intel
|
2004
|
264 × 267 mm max (10.4 × 10.5 in)
|
MicroBTX (also called uBTX) is a computer motherboard form factor. A microBTX is 10.4 × 10.5 in (264 × 267 mm) and can support up to four expansion slots.
|
DTX
|
AMD
|
2007
|
200 × 244 mm max (8.0 × 9.6 in)
|
DTX backward compatible with ATX cases. Shorter variant, Mini-DTX (mDTX) of 8 × 6.7 inches (203 × 170 mm)
|
smartModule
|
Digital-Logic
|
?
|
66 × 85 mm (2.60 × 3.35 in)
|
Used in embedded systems and single-board computers. Requires a baseboard.
|
ETX
|
Kontron
|
1999
|
95 × 114 mm (3.74 × 4.49 in)
|
Used in embedded systems and single-board computers. Requires a baseboard.
|
COM Express Basic
|
PICMG
|
2005
|
95 × 125 mm (3.74 × 4.9 in)
|
Used in embedded systems and single-board computers. Requires a carrier board.
|
COM Express Compact
|
PICMG
|
2005
|
95 × 95 mm (3.74 × 3.74 in)
|
Used in embedded systems and single-board computers. Requires a carrier board.
|
COM Express Mini
|
PICMG
|
2005
|
55 × 84 mm (2.17 × 3.31 in)
|
Used in embedded systems and single-board computers. Requires a carrier board. Adheres to pin-out Type 10[1]
|
COM-HPC Size A
|
PICMG
|
2020
|
95 × 120 mm (3.7 × 4.7 in)
|
Used in embedded systems. Requires a carrier board. Typically used for COM-HPC Client Type modules.
|
COM-HPC Size B
|
PICMG
|
2020
|
120 × 120 mm (4.7 × 4.7 in)
|
Used in embedded systems. Requires a carrier board. Typically used for COM-HPC Client Type modules.
|
COM-HPC Size C
|
PICMG
|
2020
|
160 × 120 mm (6.3 × 4.7 in)
|
Used in embedded systems. Requires a carrier board. Typically used for COM-HPC Client Type modules with multiple SODIMM memory sockets.
|
COM-HPC Size D
|
PICMG
|
2020
|
160 × 160 mm (6.3 × 6.3 in)
|
Used in embedded systems. Requires a carrier board. Typically used for COM-HPC Server Type modules with 4x full size DIMM memory sockets.
|
COM-HPC Size E
|
PICMG
|
2020
|
200 × 160 mm (7.9 × 6.3 in)
|
Used in embedded systems. Requires a carrier board. Typically used for COM-HPC Server Type modules with 8x full size DIMM memory sockets.
|
CoreExpress
|
SFF-SIG
|
?
|
58 × 65 mm (2.28 × 2.56 in)
|
Used in embedded systems and single-board computers. Requires a carrier board.
|
Extended ATX (EATX)
|
Unknown
|
?
|
305 × 330 mm (12 × 13 in)
|
Used in rackmount server systems. Typically used for server-class type motherboards with dual processors and too much circuitry for a standard ATX motherboard. The mounting hole pattern for the upper portion of the board matches ATX.
|
Enhanced Extended ATX (EEATX)
|
Supermicro
|
?
|
347 × 330 mm (13.68 × 13 in)
|
Used in rackmount server systems. Typically used for server-class type motherboards with dual processors and too much circuitry for a standard E.ATX motherboard.
|
LPX
|
Western Digital
|
?
|
229 × 279–330 mm (9 × 11–13 in)
|
Based on a design by Western Digital, it allowed smaller cases than the AT standard, by putting the expansion card slots on a Riser card. Used in slimline retail PCs. LPX was never standardized and generally only used by large OEMs.
|
Mini-LPX
|
Western Digital
|
?
|
203–229 × 254–279 mm (8–9 × 10–11 in)
|
Used in slimline retail PCs.
|
PC/104
|
PC/104 Consortium
|
1992
|
97 × 91 mm (3.8 × 3.6 in)
|
Used in embedded systems. AT Bus (ISA) architecture adapted to vibration-tolerant header connectors.
|
PC/104-Plus
|
PC/104 Consortium
|
1997
|
97 × 91 mm (3.8 × 3.6 in)
|
Used in embedded systems. PCI Bus architecture adapted to vibration-tolerant header connectors.
|
PCI/104-Express
|
PC/104 Consortium
|
2008
|
97 × 91 mm (3.8 × 3.6 in)
|
Used in embedded systems. PCI Express architecture adapted to vibration-tolerant header connectors.
|
PCIe/104
|
PC/104 Consortium
|
2008
|
97 × 91 mm (3.8 × 3.6 in)
|
Used in embedded systems. PCI/104-Express without the legacy PCI bus.
|
NLX
|
Intel
|
1999
|
203–229 × 254–345 mm (8–9 × 10–13.6 in)
|
A low-profile design released in 1997. It also incorporated a riser for expansion cards,[2] and never became popular.
|
UTX
|
TQ-Components
|
2001
|
88 × 108 mm (3.46 × 4.25 in)
|
Used in embedded systems and IPCs. Requires a baseboard.
|
WTX
|
Intel
|
1998
|
355.6 × 425.4 mm (14 × 16.75 in)
|
A large design for servers and high-end workstations featuring multiple CPUs and hard drives.
|
SWTX
|
Supermicro
|
?
|
418 × 330 mm (16.48 × 13 in)
|
A proprietary design for servers and high-end workstations featuring multiple CPUs.
|
HPTX
|
EVGA
|
2008
|
345 × 381 mm (13.6 × 15 in)
|
A large design by EVGA currently featured on two motherboards; the eVGA SR2 and SRX. Intended for use with multiple CPUs. Cases require 9 expansion slots to contain this form-factor.
|
XTX
|
Ampro / Congatec
|
2005
|
95 × 114 mm (3.74 × 4.49 in)
|
Used in embedded systems. Requires a base.
|