NVIDIA benchmarks show Run:ai platform doubles GPU utilization while cutting latency 61x for enterprise AI deployments running NIM inference microservices. (ReadNVIDIA benchmarks show Run:ai platform doubles GPU utilization while cutting latency 61x for enterprise AI deployments running NIM inference microservices. (Read

NVIDIA Run:ai Delivers 2x GPU Utilization Gains for AI Inference Workloads

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NVIDIA Run:ai Delivers 2x GPU Utilization Gains for AI Inference Workloads

Caroline Bishop Feb 27, 2026 17:35

NVIDIA benchmarks show Run:ai platform doubles GPU utilization while cutting latency 61x for enterprise AI deployments running NIM inference microservices.

NVIDIA Run:ai Delivers 2x GPU Utilization Gains for AI Inference Workloads

NVIDIA has released comprehensive benchmarking data showing its Run:ai orchestration platform can double GPU utilization for enterprises running AI inference workloads, while simultaneously slashing first-request latency by up to 61x compared to traditional cold-start deployments.

The findings come as organizations struggle with a fundamental tension in LLM deployment: small embedding models might consume just a few gigabytes of GPU memory, while 70B+ parameter models demand multiple GPUs. Without intelligent orchestration, teams face an ugly choice between overprovisioning (burning money) and underprovisioning (degrading user experience).

The Numbers That Matter

NVIDIA tested three NIM microservices—a 7B LLM, 12B vision-language model, and 30B mixture-of-experts model—on H100 GPUs. The results challenge conventional deployment wisdom.

Using GPU fractions with bin packing, three models that previously required three dedicated H100s were consolidated onto approximately 1.5 H100s. Each NIM retained 91-100% of single-GPU throughput. Mistral-7B matched its dedicated-GPU performance completely at 834 tokens per second with long-context input.

Dynamic GPU fractions pushed performance further under heavy load. Nemotron-3-Nano-30B sustained 1,025 tokens per second at 256 concurrent requests—compared to a static-fraction ceiling of just 721 tokens per second at four concurrent requests before instability. That's a 1.4x throughput improvement when traffic spikes hit.

Cold Start Problem Solved

The most dramatic gains came from GPU memory swap, which keeps models in CPU memory and dynamically moves weights to GPU as requests arrive. Scale-from-zero cold starts took 75-93 seconds for first-token generation at 128-token input. GPU memory swap cut that to 1.23-1.61 seconds—a 55-61x improvement.

For longer 2,048-token prompts, cold-start times of 158-180 seconds dropped to under 4 seconds with swap enabled.

Market Context

NVIDIA stock trades at $181.24, down 2.42% in the past 24 hours, with a market cap of $4.49 trillion. The company has been aggressively expanding its AI infrastructure partnerships. Red Hat and NVIDIA launched a co-engineered AI Factory platform on February 25, while VAST Data announced a platform tie-up on February 26.

Run:ai's fractional GPU capabilities have shown production-ready results in cloud provider benchmarks. Testing with Nebius demonstrated support for 2x more concurrent users on existing hardware.

What This Means for Enterprise AI

The practical implication: organizations can deploy more models on fewer GPUs without sacrificing latency SLAs. Static fractions work well for predictable, low-concurrency workloads. Dynamic fractions handle variable traffic and high concurrency where KV-cache growth creates memory pressure.

GPU memory swap eliminates the penalty for keeping rarely-accessed models available—critical for organizations running diverse model portfolios where some endpoints see sporadic traffic.

NVIDIA has published deployment guides for running NIM as native inference workloads on Run:ai. The platform supports single-GPU, multi-GPU, and fractional deployments with Kubernetes-native traffic balancing and autoscaling.

Image source: Shutterstock
  • nvidia
  • gpu optimization
  • ai infrastructure
  • enterprise ai
  • machine learning
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