The Intel Compute Runtime 26.01.36711.4 was published today as their first release of 2026 for this open-source GPU compute stack providing Level Zero and OpenCL support across their range of graphics hardware going back to Tiger Lake. Notable with this new Compute Runtime release is having now production-ready Panther Lake support while also introducing early support for next-generation hardware.
Following the Intel Graphics Compiler (IGC) update earlier this week that introduced Nova Lake and Crescent Island support, the Intel Compute Runtime is also ready to go with its initial support for those next-generation Xe3P-based offerings. The Nova Lake integrated graphics with Xe3P should be quite enticing as is Nova Lake itself. Crescent Island is the new enterprise AI inferencing offering that Intel disclosed in late 2025 and will begin sampling later this year.
In addition to Nova Lake S and Crescent Island, the new Intel Compute Runtime is also advertising “pre-release” support for Wildcat Lake.
Beyond the pre-release and experimental hardware support, the Intel Panther Lake support for the Compute Runtime is now listed as “production” quality compared to being shown as “pre-release” in prior versions. My Panther Lake Linux testing will begin soon including of the Compute Runtime performance and much more.
There are also some performance changes in the Compute Runtime 26.01.36711.4 release. In digging through all the commits of this new version, Intel has now increased the default heap size to 4MB for OpenCL to help with performance, compressed pool for cl_buffer, and enabling shared system USM by default for Battlemage GPUs. There are also other additions in this new version like a 64-bit semaphore command.
Downloads and more details on the new Intel Compute Runtime release via GitHub.
