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Best HP Laptop for 2025

This year has marked a big transition for HP laptops as the company shuttered longtime brand names like Pavilion, Envy and Spectre and filled out its new OmniBook line and EliteBook series. For gamers and creatives, however, the familiar Omen line has continued. I’ve tested models from each series; these are my current favorites, many of which are at or near their lowest prices of the year right now during the holiday shopping season.

What’s the best HP laptop overall?

The HP OmniBook 5 14 gets the nod for its compact design, OLED display, affordable price and record-setting battery life. The OmniBook 5 14 is a Copilot Plus PC based on a Qualcomm Snapdragon X mobile processor and can literally run around the clock on a single charge.

The OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 is pricier than the OmniBook 5 14, but its stunning design and stellar OLED display makes it a great value. While it doesn’t come close to the OmniBook 5 14 in terms of battery life, it still offers a lengthy runtime.

Year after year, we have reviewed every type of HP laptop, performing benchmark testing under controlled conditions in the CNET Labs and conducting extensive hands-on tests to thoroughly evaluate each product. With decades of experience, CNET’s laptop experts have done the testing and research to find the best laptops that HP has to offer. And here they are.

Pros

  • Unbelievable battery life
  • Sturdy, stylish and compact design
  • OLED display delivers deep blacks, vivid colors
  • Generous RAM and SSD for the price

Cons

  • OLED display isn’t the brightest
  • Slow USB-C ports

Only a few weeks after ceding the battery life throne to Lenovo in our tests, HP has snatched back the crown with the OmniBook 5 14.

Why we like it

For starters, it runs and runs (and runs and runs). It’s the current battery life champ, lasting more than 28 hours in testing. In addition to record-setting battery life, the OmniBook 5 14 offers a simple, elegant design and easy-to-carry weight — plus, an OLED display that delivers stellar contrast and vivid colors. It also supplies an ample 32GB of RAM and a roomy 1TB SSD, neither of which is a given in a laptop that costs less than $1,000.

Who it’s best for

For students and others constantly on the go, the OmniBook 5 14 is a fantastic pick at a great price.

Who shouldn’t buy it

If you are concerned about Windows-on-Arm compatibility issues, then you should skip the Snapdragon X-based OmniBook 5 14 and go for an Intel- or AMD-based laptop.

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HP OmniBook 5 14 review

Pros

  • Stunning design and first-rate build quality
  • 3K, 120Hz OLED display is awesome
  • Great keyboard and huge, haptic touchpad

Cons

  • Performance doesn’t quite live up to the price
  • Speaker placement isn’t ideal
  • Limited port selection

The OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 is a MacBook alternative that boasts a similarly elegant design and targets the same mainstream «pro» users. It starts at $1,450, which is less than the cheapest MacBook Pro, but pricing quickly jumps to MacBook Pro territory with any upgrades.

Why we like it

The 14-inch, 3K OLED display is stunning, and can be rotated into tablet mode for additional versatility. The huge haptic touchpad is awesome, and the 9-megapixel camera captures crisp video so you’ll look your best on any video calls. The Intel Lunar Lake processor offers a good balance between performance and efficiency. We also like that it can frequently be found on sale for as low as $1,100.

Who it’s best for

People looking for a MacBook but want or need a Windows laptop. The Spectre x360 14 is about as close as you can get to a MacBook in a Windows laptop, while adding a touchscreen and two-in-one versatility.

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HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 review

Pros

  • Stylish and sturdy all-metal design
  • 3K OLED display is awesome, especially for the price
  • Included pen is of high quality

Cons

  • Battery life isn’t great
  • Display doesn’t have variable refresh rate
  • You might not like typing on the latticeless keyboard (but I did)

The highly configurable HP OmniBook X Flip 14 offers style and value, and you can upgrade to an OLED display for only an extra $100.

Why we like it

You can configure it with a sweet-looking 3K, 120Hz OLED display and pay only $1,150, which is a great price for a two-in-one with an OLED surrounded by a stylish and sturdy design. I also liked the included pen, which has a nice weight and thickness to it that makes writing and sketching feel natural.

Who it’s best for

People who can’t afford Ultra Flip pricing. The OmniBook X Flip 14 can’t match the stunning looks of the HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14, but it doesn’t have to when it costs hundreds less than HP’s premium two-in-one offering. For most people, the midrange OmniBook X Flip 14 is the better buy.

Who shouldn’t buy it

The latticeless keyboard isn’t for anyone. And if you prize battery life, then you might want to skip the OLED display for a longer runtime.

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HP OmniBook X Flip 14 review

Pros

  • Excellent 2.8K OLED display
  • Beautiful design that’s also compact and lightweight
  • Competitive application and AI performance from Intel Lunar Lake CPU

Cons

  • Very expensive when not on sale
  • Battery life is good but not great

If you love the sleek look and great portability of a MacBook Air but need a Windows laptop for work, then HP’s flagship EliteBook Ultra is a great alternative.

Why we like it

With a spectacular 14-inch, 2.8K OLED display wrapped up in an elegant and compact enclosure, the EliteBook Ultra G1i deserves its Ultra label. It definitely has a premium look and feel that’s on par with a MacBook Air in terms of being thin and light yet rigid and sturdy. Its Intel Lunar Lake CPU is a well-rounded performer with great efficiency for good battery life that’ll get you through almost any workday on a single charge.

Who it’s best for

With its compact chassis and deluxe design, the EliteBook Ultra G1i is well suited for traveling executives or anyone who appreciates a small, lightweight OLED laptop for work.

Who shouldn’t get it

Anyone who can’t wait for it to go on sale or isn’t purchasing at a quantity that qualifies for a volume-pricing discount should take a pass. At its sale price of $1,899 or $1,999, the EliteBook Ultra G1i is an excellent value and a great choice for your next work laptop, but it’s harder to recommend at its full price of nearly $3,000.

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HP EliteBook Ultra G1i review

Pros

  • Competitive 1080p performance
  • Good-looking design
  • Long battery life
  • Free M.2 slot to add second SSD
  • User replaceable RAM

Cons

  • Pricey when not on sale
  • All-plastic design
  • Underwhelming audio output
  • No speedy Thunderbolt 4 or USB4 ports

The display is merely average, and the design is an all-plastic affair, but the HP Omen 16’s duo of an AMD Ryzen 7 processor and Nvidia RTX 5060 graphics delivers competitive 1080p frame rates for the price. And while the plastic shell is disappointing, it’s fairly rigid and coated with a soft-touch finish that lends it a look and feel better than true budget gaming laptops.

Why we like it

It supplies good 3D performance for the price, especially when that price is massively discounted, which it often is. I wouldn’t pay the full price of $1,800 for the Omen 16, but thankfully you don’t have to. Whenever I’ve checked its price, HP has it on sale between $1,100 and $1,200. At that price, the Omen 16 is a great value. I also liked its RGB keyboard backlighting that highlights the WASD keys and internal expansion it provides for adding more RAM and storage. Its battery life is also surprisingly lengthy.

Who it’s best for

Gamers whose budgets don’t stretch much beyond $1,000 will like the Omen 16’s well-rounded package and good 1080p performance.

Who shouldn’t get it

Anyone who comes across it when it’s not on sale shouldn’t pay the full $1,800 for the Omen 16 I tested.

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HP Omen 16 review

Pros

  • Stylish design
  • Nice OLED screen
  • Good performance for its size and components

Cons

  • Can’t force it to use the discrete GPU
  • Keyboard backlight can make keys harder to differentiate
  • Finish shows smudges

We tested a midrange model available at Best Buy for $1,700 that’s based on a Core Ultra 7 155H processor and RTX 4060 that proved suitable for high-quality 1080p or mid-quality 1440p gaming. The series starts at $1,450 for a Core Ultra 7 155H/ RTX 4050 configuration and a Core Ultra 9/RTX 4070 configuration is available for $1,900. Each is sold direct from HP.

Why we like it

The 14-inch Omen Transcend is a solid value and offers sufficient power for graphics work and mainstream gaming in a compact, stylish design. The 2.8K OLED display is good for everyday use and reasonably accurate for most creative work, and gamers will enjoy the speedy 120Hz refresh rate. The laptop also features an unusual inclusion of a wireless transceiver to connect to HP’s own HyperX Cloud 3 wireless gaming headset.

Who it’s best for

Gamers or content creators looking for a powerful yet portable laptop with a dash of style.

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HP Omen Transcend 14 review

Best HP laptops compared

See how our favorite HP laptops stack up.

Display size/resolution Weight CPU tested GPU tested
HP OmniBook 5 14 14-inch, 1,920×1,200 OLED 2.85 pounds Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-42-100 Qualcomm Adreno
HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 14-inch 2,880×1,800 OLED 2.94 pounds Intel Core Ultra 7 258V Intel Arc 140V
HP OmniBook X Flip 14 14-inch 2,880×1,800 OLED 3.1 pounds AMD Ryzen AI 7 350 AMD Radeon
HP EliteBook Ultra G1i 14-inch 2,880×1,800 OLED 2.6 pounds Intel Core Ultra 7 268V Intel Arc 140V
HP Omen 16 16-inch 1,920×1,200 165Hz LCD 5.3 pounds AMD Ryzen AI 7 350 Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060
HP Omen Transcend 14 14-inch 2,880×1,800 OLED 3.6 pounds Intel Core Ultra 7 155H Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060

Most recent addition

The HP OmniBook 5 14 is the newest laptop on the list. It offers the best battery life of any laptop I’ve ever tested while also supplying a compact, light design and an OLED display at an affordable price.

The HP Omen 16’s is the next newest addition. Its duo of an AMD Ryzen 7 processor and Nvidia RTX 5060 graphics delivers competitive 1080p frame rates for a great price. And while the plastic shell is disappointing, it’s fairly rigid and coated with a soft-touch finish that lends it a look and feel better than true budget gaming laptops. It also supplies surprisingly long battery life and a cool twist on four-zone RGB keyboard backlighting.

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Other laptops we’ve tested

Dell 16 Premium: It’s a good fit for creators as long as you aren’t turned off by its peculiar design, hefty weight and high price.

Acer Aspire 16 AI: Weighing less than 3.5 pounds and offering amazing battery life, this is the rare 16-inch laptop that’s easy to take with you.

Lenovo Yoga 9i 2-in-1 Aura Edition: This premium two-in-one is a near-perfect package with a fantastic OLED display and record-setting battery life.

Lenovo LOQ 15: This budget gaming laptop has an outdated design but serves up modern components and good 3D performance for the price.

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 2-in-1: This business convertible boasts great build quality and battery life but the display disappoints.

Alienware Aurora 16: I tested two Alienware Aurora gaming laptops, and this is not the one to get.

Alienware Aurora 16X: This is the Aurora to get.

Lenovo Legion 5i Gen 10: I was impressed with this midrange gaming laptop’s 3D performance, but its vibrant, surprisingly bright OLED display puts it over the top.

Acer Nitro V 16S AI: This budget gaming laptop serves up a big screen and big value.

MSI Katana 15 HX: I liked its 1080p performance but little else.

HP OmniBook X Flip 16: While it has a handful of appealing features, this midrange 16-inch convertible ends up being a clumsy assemblage of disparate parts.

Lenovo ThinkPad X9 14 Aura Edition: It offers a cheap path to an OLED ultraportable, but is a ThinkPad a ThinkPad without the little red nub in the middle of the keyboard?

Microsoft Surface Laptop (13-inch): It’s compact, solidly built and great for travel, but the 13.8-inch version is the better choice as your daily driver.

Dell 14 Plus: Skip the two-in-one and opt for the clamshell laptop I tested, when it goes on sale.

Acer Swift Go 16 (2025): Built around a beautiful 16-inch OLED screen, the latest Swift Go 16 improves on its predecessors without significant price inflation.

Dell 16 Plus 2-in-1: This big-screen, mini-LED convertible laptop certainly has some positives, but there are a few too many negatives to give this Plus a full-throated recommendation.

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 13 Aura Edition: It’s a great business laptop, but it can get pricey fast with upgrades.

Acer Swift 14 AI: This midrange Copilot Plus PC offers incredible battery life but is missing one key feature.

HP EliteBook X G1a: X does not mark the spot for this biz laptop when the Ultra version costs roughly the same and supplies a far better display inside a slimmer, more compact design.

How we test laptops

The review process for laptops consists of two parts: performance testing under controlled conditions in the CNET Labs and extensive hands-on use by our reviewers. This includes evaluating a device’s aesthetics, ergonomics and features with respect to price. A final review verdict is a combination of both objective and subjective judgments.

We test all laptops with a core set of benchmarks, including Primate Labs Geekbench 5 and 6, Cinebench R23, PCMark 10, a variety of 3DMark benchmarks (whichever can run on the laptop), UL Procyon Photo and Video (where supported) and our own battery life test. For gaming laptops, we’ll also run benchmarks from Guardians of the Galaxy, The Rift Breaker (CPU and GPU) and Shadow of the Tomb Raider.

For the hands-on portion of the review, the reviewer uses it for their work during the review period, evaluating how well the design, features (such as the screen, camera and speakers) and manufacturer-supplied software operate as a cohesive whole. We also place importance on how well they work given their cost, and where the manufacturer has potentially made upgrades or trade-offs for the price.

The list of benchmarking software and comparison criteria we use changes over time as the devices we test evolve. You can find a more detailed description of our test methodology on our How We Test Computers page.

Factors to consider when buying an HP laptop

HP sells a wide variety of laptops, and many models are available in multiple configurations to match your performance and budget needs. If you need help finding the right HP laptop, we can help. Here are the main considerations to keep in mind when shopping for a new laptop.

Price

The search for a new laptop for most people starts with price. If the statistics chipmaker Intel and PC manufacturers hurl at us are correct, you’ll be holding onto your next laptop for at least three years. If you can afford to stretch your budget a little to get better specs, do it. And that stands whether you’re spending $500 or more than $1,000. In the past, you could get away with spending less upfront with an eye toward upgrading memory and storage in the future. But laptop makers are have been moving away from making components easily upgradable, so again, it’s best to get as much laptop as you can afford from the start.

Generally speaking, the more you spend, the better the laptop you will get. That could mean better components for faster performance, a nicer display, sturdier build quality, a smaller or lighter design from higher-end materials or even a more comfortable keyboard. All of these things add to the cost of a laptop. I’d love to say $500 will get you a powerful gaming laptop, for example, but that’s not the case. Right now, the sweet spot for a reliable laptop that can handle average work, home office or school tasks is between $700 and $800, and a reasonable model for creative work or gaming upwards of about $1,000. The key is to look for discounts on models in all price ranges so you can get more laptop for less. Like other vendors, HP is constantly rotating sales on laptops on its site.

Size

If you’ll be taking your laptop with you to class or work or just down to your local coffee shop most mornings, then you’ll want a smaller and lighter laptop — something with a 13-inch or 14-inch screen. If you’re buying a laptop for your home or work and don’t plan on traveling with it with any great frequency, then it might serve you well to get a larger 15-inch, 16-inch or even a 17-inch display that gives you more room to work, play and multitask.

Display

When deciding on a display, there are many considerations: How much you need to display (which is surprisingly more about resolution than screen size), what types of content you’ll be looking at and whether you’ll be using it for gaming or creative endeavors.

You really want to optimize pixel density, which is the number of pixels per inch the screen can display. Though there are other factors that contribute to sharpness, a higher pixel density usually means sharper rendering of text and interface elements. You can easily calculate the pixel density of any screen at DPI Calculator if you don’t feel like doing the math, and you can also find out what math you need to do there. We recommend a dot pitch of at least 100 pixels per inch as a rule of thumb.

Because of the way Windows can scale the display, you’re frequently better off with a higher resolution than you’d think. You can always make things bigger on a high-resolution screen, but you can never make them smaller (to fit more content in the view) on a low-resolution screen. A 4K, 14-inch screen may sound overkill, but it may not be if you need to view a wide spreadsheet.

Text and the edges of images can look fuzzy on a lower-resolution display. Look for a Full HD 1,920×1,080-pixel resolution at a minimum, or a 1,920×1,200-pixel resolution on laptops with 16:10 aspect ratios that are taller than traditional 16:9 widescreen displays and provide more vertical screen space for work. A Quad HD (QHD) resolution of 2,560×1,440 pixels (2,560×1,600 on a 16:10 display) will result in crisper text and images and will likely suffice on a 13- or 14-inch laptop display, meaning you don’t necessarily need a 4K display.

Processor

The processor, aka the CPU, is the brains of a laptop. Intel and AMD are the main CPU makers for Windows laptops, with Qualcomm as a new third option with its Arm-based Snapdragon X processors. Both Intel and AMD offer a staggering selection of mobile processors. Making things trickier, both manufacturers have chips designed for different laptop styles, like power-saving chips for ultraportables or faster processors for gaming laptops. Their naming conventions will let you know what type is used. You can head to Intel’s or AMD’s sites for explanations so you get the performance you want. Generally speaking, the faster the processor speed and the more cores it has, the better the performance will be.

Battery life, however, has less to do with the number of cores and more to do with CPU architecture, Arm versus x86. Apple’s Arm-based MacBooks and the first Arm-based Copilot Plus PCs we’ve tested offer better battery life than laptops based on x86 processors from Intel and AMD.

Graphics

The graphics processor, or GPU, handles all the work of driving the screen and generating what gets displayed, as well as speeding up a lot of graphics-related (and increasingly, AI-related) operations. For Windows laptops, there are two types of GPUs: integrated (iGPU) or discrete (dGPU). As the names imply, an iGPU is part of the CPU package, while a dGPU is a separate chip with dedicated memory (VRAM) that it communicates with directly, making it faster than sharing memory with the CPU.

Because the iGPU splits space, memory and power with the CPU, it’s constrained by the limits of those. It allows for smaller, lighter laptops, but doesn’t perform nearly as well as a dGPU. In fact, there are some games and creative software that won’t run unless they detect a dGPU or sufficient VRAM. Most productivity software, video streaming, web browsing and other nonspecialized apps will run fine on an iGPU, though.

For more power-hungry graphics needs, like video editing, STEM and design applications and gaming, you’ll need a dGPU. There are only two real companies that make them, Nvidia and AMD, with Intel offering some based on the Xe-branded (or the older UHD Graphics branding) iGPU technology in its CPUs.

Memory

For memory, we highly recommend 16GB of RAM, with 8GB being the absolute bare minimum. RAM is where the operating system stores all the data for currently running applications, and it can fill up fast. After that, it starts swapping between RAM and SSD, which is slower. A lot of sub-$500 laptops have 4GB or 8GB, which in conjunction with a slower disk can make for a frustratingly slow Windows laptop experience. Also, many laptops now have the memory soldered onto the motherboard. Most manufacturers disclose this, but if the RAM type is LPDDR, assume it’s soldered and can’t be upgraded.

Some PC makers will solder memory on, however, and also leave an empty internal slot for adding a stick of RAM. You may need to contact the laptop manufacturer or find the laptop’s full specs online to confirm. And check the web for user experiences, because the slot may still be hard to get to, it may require nonstandard or hard-to-get memory or other pitfalls, including voiding the warranty.

Storage

You’ll still find cheaper hard drives in budget laptops and larger hard drives in gaming laptops, but faster solid-state drives have all but replaced hard drives in laptops. They can make a big difference in performance. But not all SSDs are equally speedy, and cheaper laptops typically have slower drives; if the laptop only has only 8GB of RAM, it may end up swapping to that drive and the system may slow down quickly while you’re working.

Get what you can afford, and if you need to go with a smaller drive, you can always add an external drive or two down the road, or use cloud storage to bolster a small internal drive. The one exception is gaming laptops: We don’t recommend going with less than a 512GB SSD unless you really like uninstalling games every time you want to play a new game.

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