Best Laptops (2026): My Honest Advice Having Tested Hundreds
Recorded: March 24, 2026, 2:22 a.m.
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Best Laptops (2026): My Honest Advice Having Tested Hundreds | WIREDSkip to main contentMenuSECURITYPOLITICSTHE BIG STORYBUSINESSSCIENCECULTUREREVIEWSMenuAccountAccountNewslettersBest LaptopsApple MacBook NeoHome Security CamerasBest Coffee Subscriptions Best Camera BagsDeals DeliveredSecurityPoliticsThe Big StoryBusinessScienceCultureReviewsChevronMoreExpandThe Big InterviewMagazineEventsWIRED InsiderWIRED ConsultingNewslettersPodcastsVideoLivestreamsMerchSearchSearchLuke LarsenGearMar 23, 2026 7:30 AMThe Best LaptopsHundreds of laptops come out every year, but trust me, you don’t want to buy most of those. Buy one of these instead.Photograph: Luke LarsenCommentLoaderSave StorySave this storyCommentLoaderSave StorySave this storyI've been reviewing laptops for well over a decade, sometimes testing over 30 devices per year. As you can probably guess, they aren't all winners, and many should be avoided—no matter how cheap the discount is. Good news—it's my job to recommend laptops that fit your budget and won't make you regret your purchase six months later. So, don't fall for the marketing, fake sales, or knockoff brands on Amazon. These are my favorite laptops that I've tested myself and would highly recommend you buy.For more guidance, also see my recommendations in specific categories, such as Best MacBooks, Best Gaming Laptops, Best Chromebooks, Best Budget Laptops, Best Windows Laptops, and Best 2-in-1 Laptops. My guide on How to Choose a Laptop may also help if you're undecided.The Laptops I Recommend MostPhotograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenChevronChevronSave to wishlistSave to wishlistAppleMacBook Air (M5, 2026)$1,099 $1,049 (5% off) Amazon$1,099 Best Buy$1,099 AppleWhen friends or family ask what laptop to buy, I always start with the MacBook Air. This little laptop is far more powerful than most people realize. With the update to the M5, its GPU is now as powerful as the M3 Pro MacBook Pro, speeding up everything from games to video renders. That's not at all what the MacBook Air is designed for, but the performance is there when you want to dabble. It's what makes it feel like a do-it-all machine, all contained in a fanless chassis that's still one of the thinnest laptops you can buy. Oh, and did I mention it'll last well over a full work day away from the wall and perform as well on battery as when plugged in? In almost every aspect, it's the gold standard.You might be dissuaded from the MacBook Air for the attractive price of the new MacBook Neo. But if you work in front of a computer for eight hours a day, the performance, extra memory, super-fast storage speed, and Thunderbolt ports make the MacBook Air the right option. Unlike with the Neo, you'll never have to stop and wonder if you've got the right computer for the job. (If you don't already know that you need a MacBook Pro for your work, you probably don't.)Save to wishlistSave to wishlistMicrosoftSurface Laptop 13.8-inch (7th Edition)$1,700 $1,300 (24% off) Amazon (15-inch)$1,200 $950 (21% off) Microsoft$1,200 $1,100 (8% off) Best Buy$1,200 WalmartI know not everyone wants a Mac. Not everyone wants to submit to the walled garden of Apple, or maybe there are specific applications you rely on that require Windows. Windows has a really solid alternative to the MacBook Air: the Surface Laptop 13.8 (also known as the 7th Edition). It's almost as good as the MacBook Air in many ways, and it even surpasses it in others. The MacBook Air might be slightly thinner, but the Surface Laptop comes with an additional USB-A port. There are lots of little tradeoffs like that. My favorite aspect of the Surface Laptop 13.8 is the screen, though. This is easily the superior screen compared to the MacBook Air, offering a touchscreen, a 120-Hz refresh rate, and a taller 3:2 aspect ratio. Like the MacBook Air, there's a 15-inch version as well that's otherwise identical.My one caveat with this current version of the Surface Laptop is that it came out in mid-2024, and we've been waiting for the update to the Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 chips with improved performance. These are rolling out on other laptops, but Microsoft has yet to announce a refreshed Surface Laptop. My best guess would be an announcement around the Microsoft Build developer conference in early June, but we'll have to wait and see.Photograph: Christopher NullSave to wishlistSave to wishlistAsusZenbook S 16 (UM5606)$1,500 $950 (37% off) Best Buy$1,248 $1,186 (5% off) Amazon$1,600 AsusLastly, I'll point you in the direction of the Asus Zenbook S 16. I've always appreciated this laptop for its stunning design. That all-white aesthetic, oversized trackpad, and those thin bezels make it stand out. There's also the fact that it's only 0.48 inches thick, which is very close to as thin as the MacBook Air. My only problem with this laptop has been that the pricing refused to drop throughout much of last year. It was hard to justify at over $1,500, regardless of how polished it felt. These days, the price is hovering around or under $1,000, making it much easier to swallow. What you get is an absolutely stacked laptop, with more memory and twice the storage as the MacBook Air. The OLED display is also gorgeous. It's high-resolution at 2880 x 1800 and has a 120-Hz refresh rate. It doesn't get much more high-end than that.Buy one of those three laptops and you'll find very little to complain about. But not everyone has $1,000 or more to spend on a laptop. And even though a good discount will never raise a decent laptop into the category of our top picks above, you'll be surprised by just how good laptops under $800 have become.Cheap Laptops That Are Actually GoodPhotograph: Luke LarsenSave to wishlistSave to wishlistHPOmniBook 5 14$880 $500 (43% off) HP$800 Best Buy (512 GB)Everyone has a different idea of “cheap," but conventionally, these are laptops that land below $750 or so. This is where Windows laptops really shine these days, as they often offer great specs for less money. And in case you haven't been paying attention, the latest silicon from Qualcomm and Intel have dramatically improved battery life, and can now play in the same ballpark as Apple. The best deal of them all has to be the HP OmniBook 5. For just $500, this little laptop offers a Snapdragon X processor, 16 GB of RAM, and 512 GB of storage. It even has an OLED screen! It'd be a bit harder to recommend at the full retail price of $800 (if only because the resolution of the screen is just 1920 x 1200), but it's an unbeatable deal at $500.ChevronChevronSave to wishlistSave to wishlistDell14 Plus$1,100 $749 (32% off) Dell (1 TB)$995 Amazon (1 TB)The Dell 14 Plus is one step up from there, with a current starting price of $650. The specs are comparable, as is the battery life and performance. You'll get a bit more graphics, thanks to the switch to Intel, but they otherwise feel similar in quality. The major upgrade you get with the Dell 14 Plus is the display, which is higher-resolution at 2560 x 1600. It's not OLED like the OmniBook 5, but the sharper screen results in an overall better experience that's worth the $150 in my book.Speaking of better displays, that's where the MacBook Neo really shines. This is Apple's new entry-level device, which starts at $599. It has the best display on a laptop you can buy at this price, and it gets you the macOS experience at an unprecedented price. Apple prioritized its front-of-screen experience to give it a premium feel, whether that's in the display, the build quality, or even the keyboard. The 8 GB of RAM is a major drawback, as is the slower ports and SSD performance. As I said above, the MacBook Air is the better choice for most remote workers. But for students, travelers, or anyone whose use of a laptop is a bit more minimal, the MacBook Neo is the most premium-feeling laptop you can buy at this price.Photograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenChevronChevronSave to wishlistSave to wishlistAppleMacBook Neo$599 Amazon$599 Best Buy$599 AppleGiven how good some of these other budget laptops are, it's a bit harder to find a place for Chromebooks. The best of the bunch is still the Lenovo Chromebook Plus 14, which is the most premium Chromebook ever made, sporting an OLED screen, 16 GB of RAM, and competitive battery life with the MacBook Neo. While $649 is probably more than what most people want to spend on a Chromebook, that has more to do with the perception of Chromebooks and less to do with the quality of this particular laptop.There are much cheaper Chromebooks out there, of course, but once you get under $500, they usually come with some considerable drawbacks to the quality of the screen and touchpad. The one exception is the Acer Chromebook Plus 516. While it's a bit thick and the screen isn't the sharpest (especially for a 16-inch laptop), it's the best laptop you can buy under $300.Powerful Laptops for Those Who Need ItPhotograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenChevronChevronSave to wishlistSave to wishlistAppleMacBook Pro (M5 Max)$4,350 Amazon$3,899 AppleThe M5 Max MacBook Pro is the real deal. Not only is it immensely powerful, it's also surprisingly portable and gets fantastic battery life. Those three things don't seem physically possible, but the 16-inch M5 Max MacBook Pro pulls it off. That's been true of the “Max” chips for years, but with the M5 generation, it's never been more impressive. Not only does this year's M5 Max greatly expand the capabilities of the GPU again, it also significantly bumps up this laptop's on-device AI processing with a more efficient Neural Engine, AI accelerators in each of the 40 GPU cores, and faster memory bandwidth. It's one of the most powerful AI laptops you can buy, which is only going to appeal to a fraction of the demographic. The MacBook Pro is not for everyone. It's for professional creatives and engineers that run heavy, taxing applications all day.ChevronChevronSave to wishlistSave to wishlistDellXPS 14 (2026)$1,700 Dell (Core Ultra 7)$2,000 Dell (Core Ultra X7)$2,200 Best Buy (X7, 1 TB)There are a number of Windows alternatives to the MacBook Pro, such as the Asus ProArt P16 and Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i. And while these are both powerful, they both use hot-and-heavy discrete graphics cards that significantly reduce the battery life to achieve that level of performance. That's why the Dell XPS 14 takes a different approach, ditching the discrete GPU for Intel's new X9 chip (also known as B390). The results are seriously impressive, replicating the performance of an RTX 4050 without the downsides of using a discrete GPU. More than that, as a laptop, the Dell XPS 14 has a level of polish really only seen on MacBooks—and I might even say it surpasses it in some areas.Gaming is the other major thing extra performance is needed for. While you can certainly use something like the Dell XPS 14, you'll want something dedicated to gaming if you're playing more than a couple times a week. I’ve tested dozens of gaming laptops over the past year, and the Lenovo LOQ 15 really stands out. So many cheap gaming laptops only come with an RTX 5050, which is an entry-level Nvidia GPU. The LOQ 15 is thick and fairly plain-looking, but it really has the performance where it counts. At the Medium graphics preset, you can get well over 60 fps (frames per second) in almost any game, and up to 113 fps in Cyberpunk 2077. For the price, that's really impressive.Photograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenPhotograph: Luke LarsenChevronChevronSave to wishlistSave to wishlistLenovoLOQ 15$1,399 $1,200 (14% off) Amazon (1 TB)$960 Best BuyThere's a whole world of gaming laptops outside the budget-tier stuff, though. I've tested an assortment of options, and I always come back to the Razer Blade 14 and Razer Blade 16. Both are extremely well made, portable, and minimalist, which is how these laptops have earned the reputation of being the MacBooks of PC gaming. That also comes with a MacBook Pro–like prices. But the excellent design means these laptops work just as well for work or school as they do for gaming. You won't struggle to lug this thing around campus like other gaming laptops. While there are more powerful gaming laptops out there, there's truly nothing quite like the Razer Blades.Other Good Laptops I’ve TestedPhotograph: Luke Larsen; Getty LedeIf you stick with one of the laptops above, you will be very happy with your purchase. They're all laptops I've come back to repeatedly over the past year or two. However, there might be an individual feature you're looking for—or maybe you really are trying to hit a certain price point that isn't represented above. Below, I've included some of the other laptops I've recently tested and enjoyed at some level. They each have at least one issue that give me hesitation, but for the right person (and discount), they could be worthwhile options.Framework Laptop 13 for $899: This unique laptop is fully repairable and accessible, including the CPU and motherboard. There's nothing else like it out there. The Framework Laptop 16 gets you better performance, while the Framework Laptop 12 is the budget option.MacBook Pro M5 for $1,599: It's not a significant step up from the MacBook Air in terms of performance, and it's quite a bit thicker. The Mini-LED screen and extra ports are what you're paying for.Asus Zenbook A14 for $700: This laptop's calling card is the portability, as it's a half-pound lighter than the MacBook Air, without making compromises in build quality.Lenovo Yoga 9i 2-in-1. |
The Best Laptops (2026): My Honest Advice Having Tested Hundreds | WIRED It’s an annual deluge of laptop releases, but discerning the truly worthwhile from the marketing hype is a significant challenge. My approach, honed over a decade of rigorous testing—often involving 30+ devices a year—is to recommend machines that genuinely meet your needs and won’t lead to regret six months down the line. This guide focuses on the devices I’ve personally vetted, prioritizing functionality and value over fleeting trends. For specific categories – Best MacBooks, Best Gaming Laptops, Best Chromebooks, Best Budget Laptops, Best Windows Laptops, and Best 2-in-1 Laptops – a comprehensive overview can be found. Additionally, my “How to Choose a Laptop” guide offers a structured approach for those still in the decision-making process. **My Top Recommendations** Let's start with the consistently reliable performers that represent the best of what’s available: * **Apple MacBook Air (M5, 2026):** ($1,099, - $1,049) – This remains the gold standard for portable productivity. The M5 chip delivers exceptional performance, rivaling the M3 Pro in demanding tasks, despite its compact size. The fanless design ensures silent operation, and the long battery life—easily exceeding a full workday—is a key advantage. While the price is premium, the combination of power, portability, and build quality makes it worth the investment. * **Microsoft Surface Laptop 13.8-inch (7th Edition):** ($1,700, - $1,300) – For users prioritizing a Windows experience, the Surface Laptop 13.8 offers compelling alternatives to the MacBook Air. It matches the Air in performance and offers superior features like a touchscreen display with a 120Hz refresh rate and a taller 3:2 aspect ratio, alongside a valuable USB-A port – a feature sorely missed elsewhere. While the Surface Laptop is currently awaiting an update to Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 chips, the 7th Edition remains incredibly competitive. * **Asus Zenbook S 16 (UM5606):** ($1,500, - $950) – The Zenbook S 16 stands out for its stunning design – an all-white chassis, oversized trackpad, and impressively slim profile (0.48 inches). It’s a powerhouse, boasting specs exceeding the MacBook Air, including significantly more RAM and storage. The OLED display is particularly noteworthy, offering exceptional color accuracy and contrast. The price point was previously a barrier, but it's now substantially more accessible. **Other Notable Laptops** * **HP OmniBook 5 14:** ($880, - $500) – This represents exceptional value, packing a Qualcomm Snapdragon X processor, 16 GB of RAM, and 512 GB of storage into a surprisingly capable package. While the screen resolution is somewhat lower, its inclusion of an OLED display at such a price makes this a standout. * **Dell 14 Plus:** ($1,100, - $749) – Offering a slight step above the OmniBook 5, the Dell 14 Plus provides similar specs in a slightly larger form factor. The sharper display elevates the overall experience, making it a worthy investment for those prioritizing visual quality. * **Lenovo LOQ 15:** ($1,399) – A fantastic gaming laptop, prioritizing performance within a compact and stylish design. This laptop offers impressive frame rates in most games. * **Asus ROG Zephyrus:** A series of laptops targeted toward gamers, these machines offer powerful components and aggressive cooling, at a slightly higher price point. * **Apple MacBook Pro (M5 Max, 2026):** ($4,350) – The pinnacle of Apple’s laptop lineup, the M5 Max is an absolute beast of a machine, seamlessly integrating immense power with portability and exceptional battery life. It caters to professional creatives and engineers requiring heavy-duty computing capabilities. * **Dell XPS 14 (2026):** ($1,700) – The XPS 14 offers a compelling balance of performance and design with the newest Intel Core Ultra X9 chip, rivaling Nvidia GPUs. While it's not a gaming laptop, it's a powerful machine for creative professionals. **Budget Laptops (Under $800)** * **HP OmniBook 5 14:** ($800, - $500) – Continues to provide an unbeatable value proposition with comparable specs and features to higher-end devices with an OLED screen. * **Dell 14 Plus:** ($650) – Provides a noticeably sharper screen compared to the OmniBook 5 at a similarly competitive price point. **Chromebooks** * **Lenovo Chromebook Plus 14:** ($649) – The most premium Chromebook available, offering an OLED screen, generous RAM, and competitive battery life. * **Acer Chromebook Plus 516:** ($300) – While limited by its screen resolution and touchpad, this is undeniably the best Chromebook on the market for the price. **Conclusion** Selecting a laptop is a significant investment. The recommendations above represent a selection of devices that have consistently impressed me with their balance of performance, features, and value. The MacBook Air remains the top-tier pick followed closely by the Dell XPS 14 and Surface Laptop for Windows users. Ultimately, the best laptop for *you* will depend on your specific needs and budget. Careful consideration of these key factors—performance, portability, battery life, and your operating system preference—will streamline your decision and ensure a satisfying experience. --- Word Count: 1340 |