Mark your calendars, Noctua has updated its roadmap of upcoming products, providing us with fresh estimates of when we should expect its latest beige-brown cooling kit to drop. There’s a whopping count of nine releases to look forward to, including new CPU coolers, but also peripherals and other cooling curiosities.


On the cooler front, Noctua has reiterated its plans to launch a next-gen low-profile AM5 CPU cooler in Q2 2027. We got an early look at a prototype of this offering at Computex 2026, and it’s fair to say you’d be hard pushed to squeeze more low-profile air cooling power onto a mini-ITX board.
In the same quarter, Noctua is working on launching next-gen workstation CPU coolers. These massive heatsinks will support a wide range of HEDT CPU sockets, including Intel LGA4710/4677 as well as AMD sTR5, TR4, SP3, SP6. They’ll also pair with future platforms.

You thankfully won’t have to wait quite so long to get Noctua’s latest thermal interface tech into your system. If you have an AMD AM5/4 CPU, you’ll be able to cool it with Noctua’s NT-CP1 carbon nanotube thermal pad from September 2026. This product aims to serve as a longer-lasting alternative to thermal paste, as it will neither pump out nor dry out over multiple thermal cycles.
Noctua is also expanding its Home product series with a new 140mm desk fan. This blower sadly won’t launch in time to save us Europeans from the recent heatwaves, with an estimated release window of Q1 2027, but should prove a potent human cooler thanks to its NF-A14x25 G2 fan.

Outside of the realms of cooling, we should finally see the Pulsar Feinmann F01 Noctua Edition hit store shelves in July 2026. This mouse has been a long time coming, as I remember seeing prototype units all the way back at Computex 2025. Weighing 73g and featuring a built-in NF-A4x10 5V fan, this is certainly a ‘cool’ clicker to watch out for.
We’re also getting two new Seasonic Noctua Edition power supplies in Q2 2027. If the PSUs are any bit as good as the Prime TX-1600 Noctua Edition that Chris reviewed earlier this year, we should expect excellent performance from both the new Prime-PX and Prime-TX.


Finally, the company is also putting together a USB fan controller (Q1 2027) and collaborating with Thermal Grizzly on a Wire View Pro II Noctua Edition (September 2026) to monitor and cool your 12VHPWR connection. Details on the former are scarce, but the latter should prove useful to enthusiasts and reviewers keen to track per-pin power draw on graphics cards.

That’s everything Noctua plans to launch through Q2 2027, as announced so far, but the majority of these dates (especially those further afield) are far from concrete. Until those new products materialise, check out our guide to buying the best CPU cooler, as well as our Noctua NL-LC1 review, to learn more about the firm’s first AIO cooler.
