Pros
- Giant, gorgeous 16-inch OLED display
- Incredibly thin and light for its size
- Strong overall performance from Intel Panther Lake CPU
- Quiet and cool operator
Cons
- Poor audio output from underpowered speakers
- Huge haptic touchpad is so big that it gets in the way
- Some flex to the thin aluminum top and bottom panels
- Cannot expand memory or storage
The Acer Swift 16 AI gets a bump from Intel Lunar Lake on last year’s model to Panther Lake this year. While application and especially graphics performance have improved, pricing has also gone up, which is not unique to Acer’s laptops, thanks to the global RAM shortage. Pricing for this year’s models is near the point where the benefit of the integrated Intel B390 GPU with its 12 Xe cores starts to lose its shine because laptops with dedicated Nvidia RTX graphics cost roughly the same or not much more.
The other change Acer made to the Swift 16 AI is adding a gigantic haptic touchpad that comes with pen support and an included pen. I’m generally a huge fan of huge haptic touchpads, but the Swift 16 AI’s is a case of too much of a good thing. And my biggest criticism of last year’s model still applies to this year’s version: the speakers stink. And that’s a shame given the entertainment prospects of the roomy 16-inch OLED display.
The Swift 16 AI remains a great work laptop. The huge, 16-inch display provides plenty of space for multitasking productivity, and its strong color performance, combined with the very capable integrated Panther Lake GPU, also lends the system some appeal for creators looking for a big-screen laptop with a thin design and easy carrying weight. At or near the price of my test system, however, you can find a 16-inch OLED laptop backed by RTX graphics. For creators, I recommend the Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i 16 Aura Edition, which offers a 16-inch OLED display with RTX 5050 graphics for $1,950 at Best Buy.
Acer Swift 16 AI (SF16-71T-73P1)
| Price as reviewed | $1,800 |
|---|---|
| Display size/resolution | 16-inch 2880×1800 120Hz touch OLED |
| CPU | Intel Core Ultra X7 358H |
| Memory | 32GB LPDDR5-9600 |
| Graphics | Intel Arc B390 (12 Xe3 cores) |
| Storage | 1TB SSD |
| Ports | USB-C Thunderbolt 4 (x2), USB-A 3.2 (x2), HDMI 2.1, microSD card slot, combo audio |
| Networking | Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 6.0 |
| Operating system | Windows 11 Home |
| Weight | 3.3 pounds (1.5 kg) |
Acer sells three models of the Swift 16 AI, and my test model sits in the middle of the series. It costs $1,800 at Acer and features an Intel Core Ultra X7 358H CPU, 32GB of RAM, Intel Arc B390 graphics and a 1TB SSD. It’s based on a 16-inch OLED display with a 2,880×1,800-pixel resolution, smooth 120Hz refresh rate and touch support.
The entry-level model costs $1,600 at Acer and is currently discounted to $1,550 at Best Buy. It’s the same as my test model, except it has half the memory at 16GB. It’s the only one of the three currently available at Best Buy.
The top-end model costs $1,199 at Acer, which is the same as my test model, but bumps you up to a Core Ultra X9 388H processor.
The Acer Swift 16 AI starts at 1,599 in the UK. I found a product page for the Swift 16 AI on Acer’s Australia site, but no pricing was available.
Color change for the better
Acer sent me a Swift 16 AI in a rather drab gray color with silver accents, but has since made a change in the design — and it looks to my eye that it’s a change for the better. Instead of safe corporate gray, the 2026 models of the Swift 16 AI will come outfitted in a darker gray, almost charcoal chassis with gold accents and an Acer logo on the top cover. From photos, the updated color scheme adds a little more personality to the system — less corporate and more consumer.
Like last year’s model, this year’s edition boasts a thin, all-aluminum chassis that’s exceptionally light for its size. It weighs just 3.3 pounds, which is slightly lighter than last year’s Swift 16 AI, which weighed 3.4 pounds. This year’s version weighs the same as the 15-inch MacBook Air and has a larger screen.
As much as I like being able to slip the Swift 16 AI in my laptop bag — and it comes with a protective sleeve — the laptop feels almost too thin. Or at least the aluminum material used for the laptop feels too thin. There’s some flex in the top and bottom panels that I’d be more willing to accept in, say, Acer’s budget Aspire series, but I’m looking for a finer fit and finish when the price approaches $2,000. However, without the uninterrupted aluminum expenses of the top and bottom panels, the keyboard deck feels more rigid.
I also like getting a haptic touchpad at this price, so I was excited to see that Acer added a large touchpad with haptic feedback for this update. Acer calls it «the world’s largest haptic touchpad,» and I’m not here to argue with that claim. It’s absolutely massive, measuring 6.9 inches wide by 4.3 inches tall. The problem I found with it is that it runs right to the front edge of the laptop, leaving no border for helping with palm rejection. The borderless front edge, combined with its gigantic size, had me accidentally bumping against or resting on its surface, resulting in unintended cursor jumps and interrupted scrolling.
Acer includes an MPP2.5 active stylus with the laptop for use with the touchpad, but not the screen. The display has touch support for tapping and swiping with your fingertip, but doesn’t have pen support. No, the pen is for sketching and drawing or scribbling notes and e-signatures on the surface of the giant touchpad. If that type of pen support matches your workflow, then you’re likely to enjoy the enormous touchpad. For the rest of us, a more sensibly proportioned touchpad is probably preferred.
Likewise, Excel jockeys will enjoy the inclusion of a number pad, but I’d rather sacrifice its narrow keys for the ability to have the rest of the keyboard centered below the display rather than positioned to the left. The keys themselves have a predictably shallow travel due to the thinness of the laptop, but I liked typing on the Swift 16 AI. The keys offer firm, springy feedback.
Display and speakers stay the same, webcam gets worse
Acer runs back the same display from last year and for good reason: it’s a fantastic 16-inch OLED panel. It offers a crisp, 2,880×1,800-pixel resolution with vivid color and deep blacks. On my display tests with a Spyder X Elite colorimeter, the Swift 16 AI showed excellent color accuracy, covering 100% of the sRGB and P3 gamuts and 94% of AdobeRGB. It also hit a peak brightness of 403 nits, providing bright whites to go with the effective zero-nit black levels for superb contrast. The one drawback to the display is its glossy finish; you’ll find yourself bobbing and weaving to get around glare and reflections at times.
Acer also runs back the same setup underpowered, downward-firing stereo speakers that sound tinny and flat. It’s disappointing to have such a big display that’s great for watching shows and movies paired with such underwhelming speakers. It’s too bad that Acer couldn’t find room on this large laptop for a quad-speaker array with fuller sound.
The webcam takes a step back with this year’s model, moving down from a 1440p camera to 1080p. Images and videos are grainier than what I experienced with last year’s model, especially in low-light environments. The camera does have an IR sensor for facial recognition logins via Windows Hello, which is the only biometric option because the laptop lacks a fingerprint reader.
The port selection offers two USB-C Thunderbolt 4 and two USB-A ports along with an HDMI port and headphone jack and adds a microSD card slot in a nod to creators eyeing the Swift 16 AI.
Inside, there’s no room for expansion. The RAM is soldered to the motherboard and therefore not user-replaceable. And there’s only a single M.2 slot, which is occupied by a 1TB SSD.
Acer Swift 16 AI performance and battery life
Based on the 16-core (four performance cores, eight efficient cores and four low-power efficient cores) Intel Core Ultra X7 358H processor, 32GB of fast 9,600MHz RAM and Intel’s integrated Arc B390 graphics that has 12 Xe3 GPU cores, the Swift 16 AI proved itself to be a very capable performer in lab testing. It showed big leaps in multi-core performance from last year’s model on our Geekbench 6 and Cinebench 2024 tests, and even bigger gains in 3D graphics performance.
It provided playable framerates on our Shadow of the Tomb Raider and Guardians of the Galaxy benchmarks at 1080p. On more demanding titles like Assassin’s Creed Shadows and F1 24, however, you’ll need to employ Intel’s XeSS Frame Generation to get to 60 frames per second or lower the resolution or quality settings. Still, for a thin-and-light laptop with an iGPU, getting this level of 3D performance is a boon. Also a boon: the Swift 16 AI stays remarkably cool and quiet, even under heavy load.
The Swift 16 AI’s result on our YouTube streaming battery drain test was good, but I was expecting more. It ran for 13.5 hours, which is fantastic for a big-screen, high-res OLED laptop, but it was only about an hour longer than last year’s model.
Should I buy the Acer Swift 16 AI?
You should get it if you’re looking for a thin-and-light, big-screen OLED laptop. You won’t find many 16-inch models that are lighter than the 3.3-pound Swift 16 AI. And with its modern Panther Lake CPU and ample RAM, it delivers strong performance and lengthy battery life. For only $150 more, though, I still like the Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i 16 Aura Edition for its better build quality and added RTX graphics muscle, even if it is more than a pound heavier.
The review process for laptops, desktops, tablets and other computerlike devices consists of two parts: performance testing under controlled conditions in the CNET Labs and extensive hands-on use by our expert reviewers. This includes evaluating a device’s aesthetics, ergonomics and features. A final review verdict is a combination of both objective and subjective judgments.
The list of benchmarking software we use changes over time as the devices we test evolve. The most important core tests we’re currently running on every compatible computer include Primate Labs Geekbench 6, Cinebench R23, PCMark 10 and 3DMark Fire Strike Ultra.
A more detailed description of each benchmark and how we use it can be found on our How We Test Computers page.
