Introduction
Intel LGA1151 is one of the most commonly used desktop motherboard platforms and is still widely found in office PCs, home systems, and older custom-built computers. Despite sharing the same socket name, LGA1151 covers two distinct CPU generations, each with different upgrade limitations.
This page provides a general overview of the Intel LGA1151 platform and explains what you can realistically upgrade. More detailed upgrade guidance is available on the chipset-specific pages linked below.
Understanding the LGA1151 platform
One of the most common upgrade mistakes with LGA1151 systems is assuming that all LGA1151 CPUs are compatible with all LGA1151 motherboards. This is not the case.
Intel reused the LGA1151 socket across two separate platform generations:
- 6th & 7th Gen CPUs (Skylake / Kaby Lake)
- 8th & 9th Gen CPUs (Coffee Lake / Coffee Lake Refresh)
These two groups are not cross-compatible, even though the socket name is identical.
LGA1151 chipset overview
The chipset determines CPU compatibility, memory support, and overall upgrade potential.
| Chipset | CPU Generations | Memory Type | Typical Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| H110 | 6th / 7th Gen | DDR4 | Basic office systems |
| B150 | 6th / 7th Gen | DDR4 | Entry-level desktops |
| H170 | 6th / 7th Gen | DDR4 | Midrange consumer PCs |
| Z170 | 6th / 7th Gen | DDR4 | Enthusiast / OC systems |
| B250 | 6th / 7th Gen | DDR4 | Common OEM platforms |
| H270 | 6th / 7th Gen | DDR4 | Popular midrange boards |
| Z270 | 6th / 7th Gen | DDR4 | High-end Gen 6/7 |
| B360 | 8th / 9th Gen | DDR4 | Very common Coffee Lake OEM |
| H370 | 8th / 9th Gen | DDR4 | Midrange Coffee Lake |
| Z370 | 8th / 9th Gen | DDR4 | Enthusiast Coffee Lake |
| Z390 | 8th / 9th Gen | DDR4 | Best overall LGA1151 boards |
What this page covers (and what it doesn’t)
This page gives a platform-level overview of Intel LGA1151 motherboards.
For more detailed upgrade advice, the platform is broken down into chipset groups, each with its own limitations and realistic upgrade paths.
The pages below explain:
- what upgrades are possible on each chipset group
- common limitations to expect
- practical upgrade advice before buying new components
Choose your LGA1151 chipset group
Entry-Level LGA1151 Chipsets
(H110, B150, B250)
Basic LGA1151 chipsets commonly found in office PCs and entry-level systems, with limited CPU and memory upgrade options.
Coming soon
Midrange LGA1151 Chipsets
(H170, H270, B360, H370)
Midrange chipsets offering better expansion options and more realistic upgrade potential for everyday systems.
Coming soon
High-End LGA1151 Chipsets
(Z170, Z270, Z370, Z390)
High-end LGA1151 chipsets designed for performance-focused systems, including support for overclocking and advanced features.
Coming soon
General upgrade considerations for LGA1151
Regardless of chipset, most LGA1151 systems support:
- DDR4 memory
- SATA SSDs
- PCIe graphics cards
- NVMe storage (board-dependent)
In practice, storage and memory upgrades usually provide the biggest performance improvement. CPU upgrades are possible but should be evaluated carefully to avoid poor value.
Final notes
Intel LGA1151 remains a viable platform for upgrades when approached with the correct expectations. Understanding the chipset and CPU generation is essential to avoid incompatible upgrades and unnecessary expenses.
For detailed guidance, continue to the chipset-specific pages above.