The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (2025)

Overview

Best MacBook for most people

Apple MacBook Air, 15-inch (M4)

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$1,139.00 Amazon The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (2)

Best Windows laptop for most people

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7, 13-inch

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$1,399.99 Amazon The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (4)

Best budget laptop

Lenovo Yoga 7i 14 (Gen 9)

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$899.99 Best Buy

Best gaming laptop

Alienware m16 R2

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$1,499.99 Dell

Best Chromebook

HP Chromebook Plus 15.6-inch

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$599.00 Best Buy

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Table of Contents

Choosing the best laptop is a largely subjective decision that comes down to your primary use cases, your preferred operating system, and your budget. In other words, there's no such thing as a universally best laptop.

This is an annoying fact of life for both laptop shoppers and those of us doling out "best laptop" recommendations, since we can't make custom judgment calls for everyone in need of a new machine. (I would love to, but I've got a thing after this.) However, I can confidently point you in the right direction of some standouts that I and other members of the Mashable team have vetted and approved.

What are the best laptops right now?

As of April 2025, we think the new 15-inch Apple MacBook Air (M4) is the best MacBook for most people. It's a sleek-as-ever notebook featuring impressive performance, open-lid support for two external displays, a great 12MP Center Stage camera, and an extremely reasonable starting price of $1,199 (making it $100 cheaper than its M3 predecessor).

SEE ALSO:

The best cheap laptops for 2025: 6 models under $1,000 that we tested and approved

The best Windows laptop we've tested is the Microsoft Surface Laptop 7, a sophisticated and snappy Copilot+ PC boasting an unrivaled battery life of nearly 23 hours. Note that Microsoft recently announced an Intel version that may appeal to users wary of Windows on ARM for app compatibility reasons, but it's a business-oriented model with a significant markup.

A note about tariffs

Now is an especially weird time to be shopping for a new laptop: President Donald Trump's tariffs on almost all imports have upended the tech market, causing some computer manufacturers to increase their prices and others to temporarily pause U.S. sales. We're monitoring this situation closely and have reached out to all major laptop brands to see what changes they've made to their lineups' pricing or availability, if any.

SEE ALSO:

Trump tariff news: iPhones getting snapped up, laptop sales disrupted – what we know

None of our current top picks are affected by tariffs (so far), but two new contenders that we have in hand for testing have been impacted. The Asus ZenBook A14 powered by a Snapdragon X processor is now $100 pricier because of tariffs, and the base Framework Laptop 13 with an Intel Core Ultra 5 125H CPU has been shelved for the time being. Framework said on X that the current 10% tariff on Taiwanese imports means it would have to sell the configuration to U.S. shoppers at a loss.

Read on for Mashable's in-depth guide to the best laptops of 2025. FYI: We've listed the pricing and specs of our testing units, which may not apply to each laptop's base model.

How will President Trump’s tariffs affect you? Keep checking Mashable for our latest tariff news and explainers, from delayed Nintendo Switch 2 preorders to reports of iPhone 16 panic buying.

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The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (8)

Apple MacBook Air, 15-inch (M4)

Best MacBook for most people

$1,139.00 Amazon

The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (9)

The Good & The Bad

  • Very competitively priced
  • M4 chip is incredibly powerful
  • Super quiet
  • Supports two external displays with its lid open
  • Nice new 12MP Center Stage camera
  • Same premium design as always
  • Also available in 13-inch size
  • Can get hot under heavy workloads
  • New Sky Blue finish is a little too subtle
  • Still stuck at 60Hz refresh rate

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the 15-inch Apple MacBook Air (M4).

Who it's for

Apple didn't reinvent the wheel in its latest 15-inch MacBook Air, but a blazing-fast processor, a few fresh features, and a new lower price make it one of the best current-generation laptop deals —if not the best. It's a fantastic pick for students, professionals, and anyone else in need of a polished, relatively portable laptop, especially those ready to give up an Intel or M1-era MacBook. (It officially feels like a big-enough jump to justify an upgrade.) MacBook Pros are nice, but they're overkill for non-specialty users, realistically.

Why we picked this

Same tried-and-true formula, new fixings. Let's start under its hood: Apple has refreshed its 2025 MacBook Air with an M4 processor, which notched a Geekbench 6 multi-core performance score of 14,992 in our testing. It's 24 percent faster than the M3 version and one of the speediest laptops in our testing database (after the high-octane M4 MacBook Pros and two Windows gaming laptops); Mashable Senior Editor Stan Schroeder called it "almost overkill" in his review. All that power means it does get a little hot when you work it hard, but does stay whisper-quiet, at least.

Less exciting but still notable are the MacBook Air's new open-lid support of two 6K external displays and upgraded 12MP camera, which now has Apple's auto-framing Center Stage and top-down Desk View feature. It also comes in a new sky blue finish, which I've seen aptly described as "like looking at a gray MacBook and someone shouting 'blue' from a hundred yards away"... which is to say, it's subtle. Schroeder requested "real colors" from Apple the next time it revisits the MacBook Air. (A smoother 120Hz display would also be nice if we're making a wish list —we've wanted a refresh rate bump for the Air since the M2 era.)

The real game-changer here is the M4 MacBook Air's price. Our review unit with 1TB of storage costs $1,599, but the base model with 256GB of storage is only $1,099. You might recall that the 15-inch M3 MacBook Air started at $1,299. "Apple doesn't do this often, so enjoy it while you can," Schroeder wrote. It's a genuinely shocking move for any laptop manufacturer at a time when price hikes are way more common, and it's one of the big reasons why the MacBook Air has reclaimed its Mashable Choice Award-winner status.

Note that the M4 MacBook Air also comes in an even cheaper 13-inch size with a slightly lower resolution and two fewer speakers (four instead of six, sans force-cancelling woofers).

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$1,139.00 Amazon The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (10)

$1,199.00 Best Buy

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The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (11)

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7, 13-inch

Best Windows laptop for most people

$1,399.99 Amazon

The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (12)

The Good & The Bad

  • Amazing, virtually unrivaled performance
  • Industry-leading battery life
  • Elegant, well-made design
  • Fun AI features
  • Some users might have app compatibility issues

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the 13-inch Microsoft Surface Laptop 7.

Who it's for

The Mashable Choice Award-winning Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 is an exceptional all-rounder— the ideal blend of performance, power efficiency, build quality, innovation, and overall value. We recommend it for nearly any Windows user who's due for an upgrade; the only reason you should pass on it is if your go-to apps aren't compatible with Windows on ARM. (An Intel-powered business edition is now available, but it'll cost you: The base model is $500 more expensive than the starter Snapdragon version.)

Why we picked this

Microsoft's Qualcomm-powered flagship laptop stunts on almost every other Windows PC we've gotten our hands on in recent years. Our 13-inch Snapdragon X Elite testing unit went nearly 23 hours per charge, making it the longest-lasting laptop we've ever tried. It also nabbed one of the highest Geekbench scores in our database when in "Best Performance" mode, zooming past every other Windows machine besides the $2,299 Acer Predator Helios 16 and the $4,485 Lenovo Legion 9i. (The M4 MacBooks also have it beat.) If all that feels like overkill, or its $1,999.99 price tag gives you sticker shock, know that it starts at just $999.99 with lesser specs.

Design-wise, the Surface Laptop 7 has a modern aluminum chassis that comes in four colorways and doesn't cling to fingerprints. Its bright display can hit a refresh rate of up to 120Hz, and its snappy keyboard is paired with a haptic touchpad. You can take your pick from two sizes, too: 13- or 15-inch, the latter of which includes a microSD card reader.

As a Copilot+ PC, the Surface Laptop 7 has a Neural Processing Unit (NPU) to support a suite of AI features, including Cocreator, a generative art tool in Microsoft Paint, Live Captions, and Windows Studio Effects that can blur backgrounds and improve lighting on video calls. (There's also the sketchy history-saving Recall feature, which you'll have to personally enable. Maybe don't.) You shouldn't buy this laptop for these tools alone, but former Mashable Tech Editor Kim Gedeon found them to be "attention-stealing" fun when she tried them.

The Surface Laptop 7's Snapdragon CPU is both a blessing and a curse: As an ARM chip, as opposed to an x86 chip from Intel, it's not going to be compatible with certain apps and programs. This might be a problem for students, as some Reddit users have pointed out. (Google Drive support was finally added in December 2024, FWIW.) But if it's a non-issue for you, personally, move this machine to the top of your list.

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$1,399.99 Amazon The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (13)

$1,999.99 Best Buy

$1,999.99 Microsoft

The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (14)

Lenovo Yoga 7i 14 (Gen 9)

Best budget laptop

$899.99 Best Buy

The Good & The Bad

  • Cool, peppy performance
  • Great keyboard
  • Good port selection
  • Decent battery life
  • Hinges should be stronger
  • Muted and dim display
  • Finicky trackpad
  • Doesn't include a stylus

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the Lenovo Yoga 7i 14 (Gen 9).

Who it's for

Prioritizing everyday power over premium design details to come in under $1,000, the Lenovo Yoga 7i 14 (Gen 9) is a practical pick for students and other budget-minded buyers —and in this economy, a happy medium for those who can't swing both a laptop and a tablet.

Why we picked this

The Yoga 7i 14 is a pared-down version of our favorite 2-in-1 laptop (Lenovo's Yoga 9i 14) that still hits most of the right marks for a little over half the price. In our testing, the base configuration with an Intel Core Ultra 5 125U processor was able to handle a few dozen tabs without breaking a sweat — it runs cool and quiet — and it lasted well over a full eight-hour workday in our battery life benchmark. Its roomy keyboard has adjustable backlighting, and it comes with an ample selection of ports... which happen to be sequestered to one side of its base, but still. And while its speakers aren't anything special, they do sound "better than average," wrote Mashable contributor and reviewer Sarah Chaney. (That's saying something, honestly: I've tried $1,900 laptops that sound like garbage.)

Of course, opting not to splurge on a nicer, pricier laptop will always mean settling in some ways. The Yoga 7i's rap sheet includes a sub-par webcam, a dim display, a loud and fussy trackpad, and a somewhat weak hinge —its lid tends to tip back if it's not on a hard surface. As with any cheap laptop, users will have to decide if those shortcomings are worth the sake of savings. For her part, Chaney thought the Yoga 7 14 was "a great deal" at its full sticker price, all things considered, but a "fantastic deal" if you can catch it on sale for even less. In the past few weeks, we've seen it dip down to just $549.99 at Best Buy.

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$899.99 Best Buy

$899.99 Lenovo

The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (15)

Alienware m16 R2

Best gaming laptop

$1,499.99 Dell

The Good & The Bad

  • Nice performance for the price
  • Great variety of ports
  • Satisfying keyboard
  • MUX switch, Nvidia Advanced Optimus let you swap between GPUs for different tasks
  • Handsome look with optional RGB lighting
  • Tinny audio
  • Lame webcam
  • Poor battery life
  • Display could be brighter

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the Alienware M16 R2.

Who it's for

Dell's latest Alienware m16 R2 is a competent, fairly priced Triple-A machine for those who usually wear headphones while gaming and rarely play on the go. Maybe you need a new every day (non-gaming) laptop, too — know that it's also easily tone-down-able.

Why we picked this

The m16 R2 might best be described as the Clark Kent of gaming laptops. Its 2024 redesign brings a smaller footprint (sans thermal shelf) and a "Stealth Mode" hotkey that ditches its RGB lighting, so it can be as subtle or showy as you'd like. It also includes an MUX switch that lets users switch between its integrated and dedicated GPUs for different tasks. (Nvidia's Advanced Optimus feature can do this automatically, too.) It's basically designed to lead a double life as an everyday workhorse and gaming champ.

Going deeper into the gaming front, our review unit "[output] impressive performance numbers on demanding games" for its mid-range specs, Gedeon said. (It packed an Intel Core Ultra 7 155H CPU and an RTX 4070 GPU.) While its 240Hz display felt a tad bit dim to her, it was otherwise smooth and punchy: "I was impressed with the contrast and vivid colors" while playing CyberPunk 2077 on it, she wrote. Its springy keyboard and responsive touchpad also got her seal of approval.

Some of the bigger bummers about the m16 R2 are its tinny speakers, shoddy webcam, and lousy battery life; it only lasted 51 minutes in our video rundown test. It also weighs in at a hefty 5.75 pounds, so forget about taking it on the go —whether you use it for work or play, it'll shackle you to an outlet. Yet none of these were dealbreakers in the eyes of Gedeon, who ultimately deemed the m16 R2 "the ultimate RTX 4070 beast of a gaming laptop you can get." It's a Mashable Choice Award winner.

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$1,499.99 Dell

$1,534.99 Best Buy

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The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (16)

HP Chromebook Plus 15.6-inch

Best Chromebook

$599.00 Best Buy

The Good & The Bad

  • Large and colorful anti-glare display
  • Stylish metallic finish
  • Runs cool and quiet
  • Useful 'Plus' software features
  • Numeric keypad
  • Easily scratched
  • Touchpad and keyboard take some getting used to
  • Unimpressive webcam
  • Muffled speakers
  • Poor battery life

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the HP Chromebook Plus 15.6-inch.

Who it's for

HP's Chromebook Plus 15.6-inch is a low-cost, large-screened laptop for those who work in the Google productivity ecosystem and watch a lot of YouTube in their free time. If you like numpads, all the better.

Why we picked this

This HP Chromebook Plus is helmed by a huge, vibrant display that blew me away when I reviewed it: "The colors are intense, with good contrast and rich blacks, and an anti-reflective panel preserves that quality at most viewing angles," to quote my write-up. I loved using it for movie-watching and light gaming (via Xbox Game Pass). On the clock, it was fast enough to handle my daily workflow, which involves a lot of Gmailing and Google Meeting, though its battery life disappointingly drained before the end of my eight-hour shift. I also found it hard to listen to anything playing on it while naked-eared: Its speakers stink.

As a Chromebook Plus, this puppy comes with some interesting software extras like File Sync, AI-powered webcam settings, and support for some multimedia tools (including Google Magic Eraser and Adobe Express). None of them felt revolutionary in my testing, but they're decent value-adds for such a cheap machine.

As of Oct. 2024, the Chromebook Plus 15.6-inch also now has Google's Help me write and Help me read tools, a Live Translate feature, generative AI wallpaper and video call backgrounds, a Recorder app, and Gemini access within its app shelf. I haven't tested these yet.

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$599.00 Best Buy

The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (17)

Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 (Gen 9)

Best 2-in-1 laptop

$1,449.99 Best Buy

The Good & The Bad

  • Decently powerful
  • Beautiful 2.8K OLED display
  • Nice keyboard
  • Great webcam
  • Fantastic audio quality
  • Comes with a Lenovo Slim Pen and a protective case
  • Runs hot and loud
  • Mediocre battery life
  • Chassis clings to fingerprints

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 (Gen 9).

Who it's for

This luxe, fairly lightweight laptop/tablet hybrid is the primo pick for users who value flexibility, audio quality, display quality, webcam quality, and processing power in about that order. Just don't work it too hardor for too long.

Why we picked this

The 14-inch Lenovo Yoga 9i is a mid-range convertible with upscale, above-its-tax-bracket fixings. It comes standard with a 120Hz 2.8K OLED display that looks so nice, most users needn't bother with its optional 4K OLED upgrade, said Chaney. (That downgrades it to a 60Hz refresh rate, anyway.) Its immersive rotating Bowers & Wilkins soundbar was another high point for her: "I've never been more impressed by a laptop's speakers," she wrote. And its remarkably sharp, clear 5MP webcam makes it fantastic for video calls.

On the performance front, the Yoga 9i's Intel Core Ultra 7 155H CPU handled heavier workloads and multitasking with ease, but a few catches. Chaney said it got "very hot" after 30 minutes of use and "sounded like it was getting ready for takeoff" with 12 Chrome tabs open simultaneously. It ran a bit quieter when unplugged, but that won't be a realistic setup for a full workday: It only lasted just over seven hours in our battery life benchmark.

Still, those felt like forgivable sins to Chaney when stacked against its premium features, especially for less than $1,500 all-in. (Also worth mentioning: It comes with a free Lenovo Slim Pen worth $59.99.) She called it "an excellent deal" at full price, and we handed it a Mashable Choice Award.

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$1,449.99 Best Buy

$1,449.99 Lenovo

The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (18)

Apple MacBook Pro, 16-inch (M4 Pro)

Best laptop for photo and video editing

$2,249.00 Amazon

The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (19)

The Good & The Bad

  • Incredibly powerful
  • Great battery life
  • 12MP camera with Desk View feature
  • Snappy keyboard
  • Amazing speakers
  • Thunderbolt 5 ports
  • Nano-texture display option
  • Laughably expensive as tested

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the 16-inch Apple MacBook Pro (M4 Pro).

Who it's for

A majestic piece of modern machinery, Apple's jacked new 16-inch, M4 Pro-fueled MacBook Pro is a future-proofed investment for creative professionals who run intense multimedia-editing apps and software on a regular basis.

Why we picked this

Put simply, this MacBook Pro is a beauteous behemoth. With a Geekbench 6 multi-core score of 22,758, it's the most powerful laptop we've ever tested by a not-close margin. (The runner-up, Lenovo's $4,485 Legion 9i, scored a 17,711.) It "can handle heavy workloads without a single stutter," said Gedeon. It's also incredibly long-lasting, surviving for nearly 21 hours in our battery life benchmark.

While it may look like a pretty standard MacBook on the outside — minimalist, relatively thin, made from aluminum — Apple's tacked on a few subtle but noteworthy design upgrades. For one, it now comes with three next-gen Thunderbolt 5 USB-C ports for zippy data transfer speeds. (These accompany an HDMI port, an SDXC card slot, a MagSafe 3 charging port, and a headphone jack.) Two, it can hit up to 1000 nits of SDR brightness, a bump from 600 nits in its M3 Pro predecessor. There's also a new option to add a glare-reducing "nano-texture" display finish, which wowed Gedeon when she took the laptop into her backyard: "I didn't have to squint, adjust angles, nor play hide-and-seek with shadows," she wrote. And three, the new MacBook Pro's camera is now a 12MP Center Stage shooter (up from 1080p) with support for Desk View, a new feature that produces an overhead view of the user's desk.

Its six-speaker setup is the same one you'll find in the M3-era Pros, but no complaints there. Gedeon likened its audio quality to a "gourmet apple pie ... piping hot, golden, and worth every sinful calorie."

And by calories, we mean dollars. It's tempting to recommend the M4 Pro MacBook Pro to anyone who values power efficiency in a laptop, but its price point keeps it firmly in "experts-only" territory. (Our upgraded testing unit with 48GB of RAM, 2TB of storage, and a nano-texture display came in at $3,649; the base configuration goes for $2,499.) Don't bother with the splurge unless you'll make full use of it on the daily. For what it's worth, though, we also like the new 14-inch M4 MacBook Pro for those with less strenuous workloads; that one starts at $1,599.

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$2,249.00 Amazon The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (20)

$2,499.00 Best Buy

The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (21)

Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2

Best laptop for creative professionals

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The Good & The Bad

  • Unique and versatile pull-forward design
  • Superb build quality
  • Haptic touchpad with adaptive touch mode
  • 120Hz refresh rate
  • Built-in Surface Slim Pen 2 storage and charging
  • Expensive
  • Hefty
  • Surface Slim Pen 2 sold separately
  • Starting to get a little outdated

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2.

Who it's for

The Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2 is an unconventional and versatile laptop for a deep-pocketed professional artist who routinely works with a stylus. (And ideally, they'll have one on hand already.) Gedeon also plugged it "for differently abled users who could take full advantage of [its] adaptive touch trackpad feature."

Why we picked this

The Surface Laptop Studio 2 is, as its name suggests, a laptop. But the unique pull-forward design of its 120Hz, 14.4-inch touchscreen display means it can also "transform into a digital easel and a tablet," Gedeon said, "[making] it an artist's playground." Just like its predecessor from 2021, it's fine-tuned for drawing, sketching, and other creative work —though it still doesn't come bundled with a stylus, which feels like a silly omission on Microsoft's part. (It does have built-in storage and charging for the Surface Slim Pen 2, at least.) Notably, though, its silky-smooth haptic touchpad has an adaptive touch mode for users with limited mobility; it's the same one on the Surface Laptop 7.

Things start looking more familiar once you move inside the Surface Laptop Studio 2, as far as higher-end laptops go. There's a desktop-grade Intel Core H-Series processor and an Intel Iris Xe graphics card in the base model, which you can opt to upgrade to a dedicated Nvidia GeForce RTX GPU. It's not technically a Copilot+ PC, but it does have an NPU that equips its 1080p webcam with Windows Studio Effects. It also counts a microSD card reader among its ample array of ports. All that machinery means it's quite a bit heavy, so it'll probably pass on plein air doodling sessions in favor of staying parked on a desk. That said, it has a surprisingly decent battery life for how brawny it is.

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The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (22)

Asus Zenbook Duo (2024)

Best dual-display laptop

$1,399.90 Amazon

The Good & The Bad

  • Beautiful displays
  • Excellent for multitasking
  • Can be used in several different modes
  • Good battery life
  • Clicky detachable keyboard
  • Includes stylus and built-in kickstand
  • Quiet audio
  • Mediocre webcam

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the Asus Zenbook Duo (2024).

Who it's for

Asus' 2024 Zenbook Duo is the tops for zealous multitaskers who need more screen real estate than a standard laptop can provide, but don't want to haul around a separate monitor. It'll also appeal to those who simply appreciate a good, fair value: It feels like a machine that costs more than $1,500, a number that includes useful accessories to boot.

Why we picked this

The Mashable Choice Award-winning Zenbook Duo from last year features two bright OLED displays stacked on top of one another, a detachable Bluetooth keyboard that works with both of them, and a built-in kickstand that allows it to shift into different positions. This design could feel super gimmicky if it wasn't executed smartly, but Asus nailed it —and for well under $2,000. "[Single]-display laptops are now canceled," said Gedeon, who confessed to feeling "spoiled" after testing this one in her everyday workflow. "How can I work on my MacBook Air, my daily driver, without missing the masterful app-juggling capabilities of the Zenbook Duo?"

Speaking of MacBook Airs: The base Intel Core Ultra 7 155H configuration of the ZenBook Duo performed on par with Apple's M2 chipset in testing. (That one powered our former favorite "budget" MacBook.) Among other Windows laptops, it scored similarly to the two newer Intel Core Ultra Series 2 models we've tested thus far, which cost a few hundred dollars more. While the Zenbook Duo isn't a heavy lifter, it's more than fine for moderate use. Its quiet speakers and dull webcam won't dazzle anyone who's defecting from Team Apple to Team Windows, but those are minor gripes in the grand scheme of things. For productivity pros, the Zenbook Duo shines where it matters most: adequate speed, plenty of screens, and a fair selling price.

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$1,499.99 Best Buy

$1,499.99 Asus

Topics Apple HP MacBook Microsoft Gadgets

How we tested

You can't judge a laptop by its appearance or advertised specs alone. As such, Mashable utilizes a thorough hands-on testing process to review and recommend the best laptops to our readers.

The bulk of this laptop testing happens as part of an everyday workflow wherein reviewers treat their testing units as daily drivers. We believe it's important to see exactly how a laptop functions in a real-world setting, not in a lab, to accurately capture the user experience.

We supplement these trial runs with industry-standard performance benchmarks. These are easily repeatable tests that produce scores we can use to quantify and compare different laptops' processing power. We also put every laptop through a battery life test, which varies depending on the type of laptop. For gaming laptops, we tack on two additional benchmarks that measure machines' graphical capabilities.

We record the findings of our testing in a rubric, and each laptop gets scored on a five-point scale on the basis of performance, design/build quality, battery life, and value. This rubric standardizes scoring across our laptop reviews and allows us to draw granular comparisons between models. A 0/5 is a flop that should be avoided at all costs, while a 5/5 is a laptop we can't live without. Any laptop that scores a 4.5/5 or higher receives a Mashable Choice Award.

The highest-scoring laptops are featured in this guide to the best laptops. We also add them to our roundups of the best cheap laptops, the best Windows laptops, the best MacBooks, and the best gaming laptops as applicable.

Read our full laptop testing methodology.

What's on deck

We'll soon test the following laptops:

  • The Asus ZenBook A14, a featherlight Copilot+ PC with a durable "Ceraluminum" chassis, an OLED display, and a ridiculous rated battery life of up to 32 hours per charge. I briefly checked it out at CES 2025, and it took home our Best of CES laptop category award.

  • The Asus Vivobook S 15, a sub-$1,000 Copilot+ PC with a 3K OLED display, an RGB backlit keyboard, and a rated battery life of up to 19 hours.

  • The Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x (Gen 9), a handsome mid-ranger with an OLED touchscreen and a rated battery life of up to 23.5 hours.

I also have the base Intel-powered Framework Laptop 13 in hand for testing, but as mentioned up top, it's temporarily unavailable for purchase in the U.S. because of tariffs. I'll try it eventually after I work through the rest of my backlog, but if it scores well, I won't make it a featured pick on this guide until U.S. shoppers can buy it again.

What we've tested lately (that didn't make the cut)

I'm fresh off testing the Dell XPS 13 (9450), a 2024 Lunar Lake PC that's the last of its kind. (Dell phased out the XPS series earlier this year.) It's easily one of the prettiest and most stylish laptops I've ever gotten my hands on, largely thanks to its edge-to-edge design and the tandem OLED touchscreen display on my review unit: It's luscious, bright, and finished with an Anti-Reflect coating that makes it immune to annoying glares. At 13.4 inches, the XPS 13 is an ultraportable stunner.

What's more, the XPS 13 lasted over over 13 hours in our battery life test. That's not an especially long runtime compared to other Windows laptops in our database, but it's well above the category's current median and solid for a machine with such a fancy display.

However, the XPS 13 over-prioritizes form over function in several ways that I found frustrating. Its zero-lattice keyboard is cramped, stiff, and topped off by an odd touch function row. Its fussy, fallible touchpad would click when I wanted to scroll and drag when I wanted to click, and I couldn't feel its haptics even when I had them turned all the way up. Most egregiously, the XPS 13 only has two Thunderbolt 4/USB-C ports —there's not even a headphone jack! (First, they came for our smartphones...)

The overall value prop for its internals just isn't there, either. My mid-range Intel Core Ultra 256V loaner with 16GB of memory and 512GB of storage costs $1,849.99. (Most Windows laptops and MacBooks we've tested in that price range are stronger performers with at least 1TB of storage, and some have double the RAM.) Granted, the XPS 13 starts at $1,199.99 if you scrap its tandem OLED display, which is an optional add-on, but I think that's one of its biggest draws. I ultimately rated it a 3.8/5.

In January, I tested the HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14, a 2-in-1 Lunar Lake laptop priced at $1,899.99 as tested (with an Intel Core Ultra 258V processor, 32GB of RAM, and 2TB of storage). It's an absolutely stunning machine with a colorful 3K OLED touchscreen display, a satisfying keyboard, a velvety touchpad, and a dark aluminum chassis that gives it a moody and elegant look. It also lasted an impressive 15 hours in our battery life test. That said, it has some baffling port placements, mediocre bottom-firing speakers, an oversaturated webcam, and disappointing performance benchmark results.

In a Geekbench 6 multi-core test, my OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 scored slightly lower than the M2-powered MacBook Air from 2023 and significantly lower than its own predecessor. That would be last year's HP Spectre x360 14, which had a mid-range Core Ultra Series 1 processor as tested. I expected way more from a machine with Intel's freshest upper mid-range CPU.

Ultimately, I rated the OmniBook Flip 14 a 4.4/5 — very respectable, but just short of being a Mashable Choice Award winner. It's a flashy premium hybrid for splurgers who want a future-proofed laptop that won't work very hard, but the zippier Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 feels like a better value for most people at $1,449.99 as tested.

If you're choosing between the two HP models, I'm also tempted to recommend the Spectre x360 14 over the OmniBook Ultra Flip 14. It offers more power and better top-firing speakers for a comparable price.

Frequently Asked Questions

Ultimately, your budget should reflect your laptop's primary use case(s) and your preferred operating system. Here's what you can expect at different price ranges:

  • Laptops that cost $300 to $600 are budget Windows notebooks and Chromebooks reserved for word processing, web browsing, and email sending. Models on the lowest end of this price range tend to be clunkers with pokey Intel Celeron N Series CPUs and eMMC storage; spending a little extra can get you a sleeker machine with a better entry-level processor, more battery life, SSD storage, and a backlit keyboard.

  • Laptops that cost $600 to $1,000 are mostly Windows models and high-end Chromebooks with crisper displays and mid-range CPUs that are good for schoolwork, streaming, and casual gaming.

  • Laptops priced at $1,000 to $1,500 are peppy Windows ultrabooks, MacBooks, and gaming laptops with plenty of storage space, brighter and prettier displays, enough power for light photo and video editing, and great graphics.

  • Laptops that cost more than $1,500 are beautiful, beefy, and blazing-fast MacBooks Pros and Windows desktop replacements that can handle professional content creation and intense gaming.

If you commute daily or travel often, a lightweight, slim, and compact laptop in the 11- to 13-inch range will serve you best. If you're a huge movie buff, a gamer, or a creator who doesn't normally take their laptop on the road with them, think about bulking up to a 15- to 17-inch model with heft that affords it more power.

You get what you pay for, but some brands' budget laptops can take you pretty far these days, and certain use cases don't necessitate the latest or most powerful specs. For more intel, check out our guides to the best cheap laptops and the best budget laptops under $500.

The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts (23)

Haley Henschel

Senior Shopping Reporter

Haley Henschel is a Chicago-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable who reviews and finds deals on popular tech, from laptops to gaming consoles and VPNs. She has years of experience covering shopping holidays and can tell you what’s actually worth buying on Black Friday and Amazon Prime Day. Her work has also explored the driving forces behind digital trends within the shopping sphere, from dupes to 12-foot skeletons.

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