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Wondering which laptop is right for you? We’ve rounded up top models from Microsoft, Dell, Asus and more
When shopping for a new laptop in 2024, you have a wider choice than ever. To help you find the right device, we’ve tested and reviewed hundreds of the best laptops from brands like Apple, Dell, Microsoft, Lenovo and more.
Our list includes laptops to suit every taste and budget, from cheap Chromebooks and portable business ultrabooks to powerful gaming laptops. Our experts have extensively tested every laptop that’s made it into our round-up, putting them through their paces in a variety of potential use cases, and we only recommend laptops we think you’ll love.
Apple devotees have a straightforward choice between the MacBook Pro and MacBook Air, but Windows laptops come in a much wider variety of shapes, sizes and prices. If you want to spend as little as possible on a laptop you’ll use only occasionally, then Chromebooks have you covered. Google’s range of Chrome OS laptops has come a long way since 2011. We’ve included the Asus Chromebook plus CX34 in our list of the best laptops below.
So, which laptop should you buy? However much you want to spend, the breadth of options out there can be overwhelming, but we’re here to help, with our comprehensive reviews of the best laptops on the market.
We test each laptop by first running benchmarking software to accurately rank the performance of the device against every other laptop we’ve reviewed. Where possible, we stress-test each laptop’s performance using a selection of graphically demanding PC games. For our most recent round of testing, we ran Forza Horizon 5, Cyberpunk 2077 and Cities: Skylines II.
Even if you don’t plan on using your laptop for gaming, these kinds of performance tests tend to reveal any underlying problems with a laptop’s heat dissipation and thermal throttling – that’s when a CPU slows itself down to avoid damaging the components. It’s a common issue with fanless ultrabooks in particular.
To get the best idea of what they’re actually like to use on a daily basis, we swapped out our regular laptop for our testing unit and put it through several weeks of our regular work schedule. That includes photo-editing, video-rendering, Zoom calls, extensive writing sessions, moving from home to the office and connecting to external monitors.
Most of the laptops featured here can be configured to have more RAM, a bigger hard drive or a faster processor. You can also find a bargain by searching for earlier models of the laptops we’ve picked, though, be aware some of the features we mention might not appear in previous generations.
IndyBest is The Independent’s expert-driven shopping section. We extensively test every product we feature to bring you unbiased reviews based on real-world testing, and we only recommend products we think you’ll love.
Steve Hogarty is a technology journalist with more than a decade of experience writing about everything from smartphones to laptops. His tests are designed to measure each laptop’s performance in a wide range of situations and locations, from everyday office use to more intensive tasks like gaming and video rendering.
Dell’s flagship laptop, the XPS 15 combines a sleek design with top-end specifications. From the crisp and bright OLED display to the 13th-generation Intel CPU – backed up with a generous 16GB of memory in the base model – it’s one of the best Windows ultrabooks you’ll find for productivity.
In our full review of the Dell XPS 15, our tester was impressed by the upgraded display and performance, calling it “a high-performance and productivity-focused Windows machine with a spectacular OLED display and a better battery life than ever”.
Build quality is solid, and Dell has even found room to add some touches of character to the chassis, such as the textured carbon fibre palm rest to prevent sweaty palms while working.
At just shy of 2kg, the Dell XPS 15 isn’t the lightest laptop we’ve tested, but it feels nicely balanced to hold. Port selection is generous, with a pair of Thunderbolt USB-C ports alongside a DisplayPort connection for external monitors.
The base model doesn’t use an OLED display – you’ll have to fork out extra to get that impressive screen – but Dell gives you plenty of options to choose between when configuring the Dell XPS 15 to your budget.
The Asus ZenBook pro 14 OLED packs impressive performance into a slim and lightweight 14in ultrabook package. It’s configurable up to a whopping Intel Core i9 processor and a dedicated RTX 4070 GPU, but even the mid-spec models come with a 4000 series GPU, making them capable enough for serious creative work, such as 4K video-rendering and browsing giant Adobe Bridge libraries.
The display is similarly impressive: a 2.8K OLED screen running at 120Hz with a decent 550 nits of brightness. Images and video look great on this display, the OLED tech delivering perfect blacks and rich contrast, while the 100 per cent DCI-P3 gamut makes it suitable for colour work.
Despite its thin profile, the ZenBook pro 14 OLED feels reassuringly sturdy. The keyboard offers a comfortable typing experience with ample key travel. Unique to this laptop – and because Asus loves being weird sometimes – there’s an iPod-style rotary dial on the trackpad that can be customised to control the application you’re using.
The ZenBook pro 14 OLED is as good as a 14in ultrabook gets. During testing, the standard shortcomings of any super-thin laptop came to light: battery life is eaten up by that glorious OLED screen and GPU, and, while the dynamic fan controls work perfectly, performance gets dialled down to prevent overheating when running several demanding processes at once. That’s to be expected in such a compact device, but we rate the ZenBook pro 14 OLED as a top performer in this category all the same.
The newest Dell XPS 13 is the best this series of Windows laptops has ever been. The switch to a Snapdragon X Elite chip gives it a huge boost to battery life and efficiency, the starting configuration of 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD and a 1920 x 1200 display is excellent value, and our benchmarking tests place it among the top performers in this category.
Like other next-generation laptops running on a Snapdragon chip, the usual caveat applies: while things are fast-improving there are still some lingering compatibility issues with software designed for the more widely used Intel and AMD chips. These are quickly being fixed by app designers and most users won’t notice any problems, but specialist users like developers and gamers might find that their software won’t run or their games take a performance hit on the new architecture.
Those techy foibles aside, the Dell XPS 13 is a brilliant little laptop. It’s thin, portable and lightweight at 1.2kg. The new chip delivers truly impressive battery life and performance. The minimalist flat keyboard, haptic function row and invisible trackpad might split opinion, but we think it’s a striking piece of design. In either case, it’s practical and comfortable to use all day. Less practical is the minimalist port selection: you get just two USB-C ports, enough to plug in an external monitor while charging, and nothing else.
The latest MSI Prestige 14 evo switches to the energy-efficient Intel Core Ultra processor with 16GB of RAM, giving it great all-round performance for business users and everyday tasks.
While it lacks the support of a dedicated GPU, it comfortably handles demanding workplace tasks, such as photo editing and some light video rendering without breaking a sweat.
The design is polished, using a lightweight and slim chassis that’s sturdy to the touch. MSI claims the Prestige 14 evo has “military-grade” durability, and while we didn’t feel compelled to try rolling over our test unit in a tank, the laptop feels like it could take a few knocks. The keyboard is particularly delightful to work on all day, with plenty of travel in the keystrokes, though MSI has inexplicably decided to cram the ‘page up’ and ‘page down’ keys into a tiny space surrounding the arrow keys.
The display gets a decent upgrade over the previous model, now a 1920 x 1200 panel running at 144Hz, while the HDMI 2.1 port, a pair of USB-C ports with Thunderbolt and a classic USB 3.1 port gives you plenty of options to connect to external monitors and accessories. Extra touches such as a fingerprint reader and facial recognition via Windows Hello round off a capable and affordable productivity laptop.
Lenovo has been quietly producing excellent laptops and tablets at affordable prices for years, and the Lenovo yoga slim 7 is the manufacturer’s best ultrabook so far. This year’s model sees a refresh, with the newest CPUs from Intel and AMD, making it a great option for productivity-focused users looking for portability and battery life.
The all-metal chassis feels reassuringly sturdy, despite its slim and featherweight design, and the lack of heavy branding gives the laptop a minimalist, MacBook-esque aesthetic. The battery life is equally impressive, consistently lasting us a full workday on a single charge.
You’re also getting a 14in OLED display as standard, which is great to see in a Windows laptop in this price range. The port selection is decent, with a pair of USB-C Thunderbolt ports and the option to connect to an external display using HDMI 2.1. The Lenovo yoga slim 7 is a well-rounded laptop that delivers excellent performance, long battery life, and a comfortable typing experience, making it a strong contender for everyday use.
The Surface Laptop is as near to a MacBook-style experience as you’ll find on any Windows laptop. The minimalist design, unified and streamlined software, and premium build quality all scream top-tier, with none of the usual bloatware and tacked-on apps found in other high-end Windows laptops.
Just as Apple ditched Intel for its own in-house chip, this is the first Surface Laptop to come with an ARM-based Qualcomm chip as standard. You can think of it as the transition from petrol to electric cars: fundamentally a better and more efficient way of running things, but structurally different with a few drawbacks for edge cases during the transition.
The vast majority of users will enjoy truly impressive battery life and supercharged performance with everyday tasks like web browsing, creative work and entertainment, but if you use your laptop for gaming or you’re running older, uncommon software you might notice a drag on battery and performance – or outright crashes – as the laptop works overtime to emulate the older x64 framework.
The latest Surface Laptop feels like the glittering future of Windows devices, though it will take more time for software developers to catch up and take advantage of what’s on offer. For everyday users, it’s a hands-down MacBook Air-beater and the high benchmark of Windows laptops – for anyone who knows what “x64” means, it’s a functional work-in-progress with oodles of promise.
Apple’s premium laptop is still the go-to machine for specialist users, creatives and editors who need every last bit of processing power. Powered by Apple’s latest proprietary M3 chip, the MacBook pro can handle tasks that would have its slimmer cousin wheezing into a brown paper bag. Like the MacBook air, the power button has a built-in fingerprint sensor, the keyboard is comfortable and the trackpad is big and responsive.
The best laptop for productivity and creative tasks – and the only laptop that can reasonably claim to have fashion credibility – the MacBook pro is a masterpiece of design.
Pro-gaming brand Razer continues to produce some of the best premium gaming laptops and accessories around, pairing desktop-grade performance with well-optimised cooling in an understated unibody chassis milled from a single block of aluminium.
The Razer blade is the brand’s range of high-end gaming laptops and comes in 14in, 16in and 18in sizes. The smallest is the cheapest, but still clocks in at a bank balance wrecking £1,949.99 – and that’s just the starting price.
Powering everything is the AMD Ryzen 9 processor with 16GB of RAM, running alongside the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060. As with most gaming laptops, cramming a top-end GPU into a device this small is like putting a jet engine in a Ford Fiesta, but the Razer blade 14 manages to balance performance and thermal management well to get the most value out of this expensive little card.
The 2560 x 1600 display runs at a silky smooth 240Hz, but the hardware can easily handle 4K gaming when plugged into an external monitor. The 1TB SSD is plenty for your Steam library, while neat design touches like the expansive glass touchpad, comfortable keyboard and generally minimalist looks mean the Razer Blade 14 can do double duties as a creative work laptop.
Do you really need all this performance in a 14in laptop? Probably not. You can spend half as much on a gaming laptop and still play most modern games without any issues, but if you want maxed-out graphics and cutting-edge, future-proofed specs, the Razer 14 is the one to beat.
Apple’s thinnest, lightest MacBook transcended the tech world to become an instantly recognisable design icon, the profile of which many rival laptops have since followed. If you’ve ever held one of these machines, you’ll understand why it’s such an alluring device: the MacBook air is an elegant piece of engineering, weighing just 1.24kg and measuring 1.13cm thin. The 2024 model is powered by Apple’s latest M3 processor, an ARM-based chip that unlocks notable performance boosts and better battery efficiency over the older Intel CPU seen in previous generations.
If you mostly work inside a browser tab, especially on Chrome, you should consider making your next laptop a Chromebook. The Asus Chromebook plus CX34 uses Google’s web-based Chrome OS operating system: a streamlined, simplified and securer alternative to a traditional laptop. That means no regular Windows apps, which can be limiting, but you get an operating system that’s always up to date and secure.
The Chromebook plus CX34 is one of the better examples of the form, pairing a sleek minimalist design with sensible specifications. Developed in partnership with Google, it’s specced to match a decent entry-level Windows laptop with an Intel Core i3 processor backed up by 8GB of RAM. Higher configurations are available if you want even better performance.
Google’s given its entire Chromebook Plus range a big AI upgrade, so the CX34 comes with 12 months of free access to its Google One AI Premium plan, which includes the most advanced version of the Gemini large language model.
The range of CPUs on offer can seem bewildering but don’t sweat it. Unless you really know what you’re doing, you don’t need to worry too much about the differences between the two main brands: AMD and Intel. They both make roughly similar versions of one another’s CPUs.
The very latest laptops have started using Snapdragon CPUs built by Qualcomm. While on the face of things, there’s no obvious difference – you get the exact same Windows experience – under the hood, Snapdragon chips are designed differently to Intel and AMD chips. Think of it as an electric car versus a petrol one.
Most software isn’t designed to run on Snapdragon yet, so when Windows encounters an incompatible app it will seamlessly “emulate” an Intel/AMD setup to keep things working. This happens in the background but means your laptop has to work a lot harder, which impacts performance.
Some apps – especially video games and niche software – can’t be emulated. While things are improving quickly, Snapdragon laptops will still occasionally fail to run some software.
Intel’s most popular range is called the Core series. These include the affordable Core i3, the mid-range Core i5, the high-end Core i7, and the specialist Core i9. The bigger the number, the faster the processor. For most users, the Core i3 is more than enough power. For gaming and processor-intensive tasks, such as rendering large files and video editing, the Core i5 or Core i7 can be a useful upgrade.
Mirroring this, AMD has the Ryzen range. These include the Ryzen 3, Ryzen 5, Ryzen 7, and Ryzen 9 processors. They’ll offer similar levels of performance to their Intel counterparts. While the underlying hardware is different, you’ll notice no difference in how your laptop actually functions.
Apple MacBooks are another kettle of fish entirely. Until recently, Apple used Intel processors, before it upgraded its entire range to its proprietary M1, M2 and M3 CPUs. These are, at least, a little easier to think about: M3 is faster than M2.
As newer processors are always improving, these four simple tiers don’t change in number. They’ll always refer to the most and least powerful processors each CPU brand manufactures. What changes are the digits following the CPU name, with the first two digits usually referring to the CPU’s generation.
New generations of processor arrive each year. They’re faster, obviously enough, but they’re also designed to be more energy efficient or support new features such as artificial intelligence and raytracing.
There are other Intel CPUs on the market, such as the Celeron series. Celeron is designed to be super affordable and low-end, for users who really don’t need much processing power. You’ll find them in budget laptops.
Most users can get away with 8GB of RAM (or memory), though 16GB has lately become the standard. RAM is storage your laptop is constantly using to juggle data, so it’s essentially a measure of how many things your device can do at once before it starts to slow down. This gives you enough memory to load Windows smoothly, and run a few demanding apps.
As software becomes more complex, it starts to demand more memory – 16GB should future-proof your laptop against this for a few years to come.
MacBooks have less RAM on paper because they work a little differently. The M3 chip is handling a lot of the data-juggling itself, so the device needs less dedicated RAM, which means your 16GB goes a little further than it does on a Windows laptop.
Most laptops use Microsoft’s Windows operating system, while MacBooks use Apple’s macOS operating system.
Chromebooks are different. They run on Chrome OS, an operating system designed by Google. Anyone can license this operating system, so you’ll see Chromebooks manufactured by a wide range of brands (called OEMs) and available in various styles.
Google’s operating system doesn’t run traditional desktop programs. Instead, it behaves more like the Chrome web browser, using online apps such as Google Docs and some Android apps.
This sounds limiting – and, for most users, it is – but there are upsides. Because most of the processing is happening over the internet, Chromebooks don’t need to be so powerful. This means they generally have a longer battery life, are much cheaper, far more secure and boot up faster than regular laptops.
The Dell XPS 15 is our top pick of Windows laptops, thanks to its all round great performance, excellent screen (if you stump up extra) and unbeatable build quality. For a more budget friendly laptop, we recommend the MSI Prestige 14 evo, which offers good all-round features and more than enough performance for everyday users.
Apple users have an easier choice, and the latest models of the MacBook pro and MacBook air are among our favourite laptops right now.
Want something even more portable? Here’s our guide to the best tablets