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Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 3
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future)

My team and I put the best laptops for engineering students to the test. These are our 7 top-performing laptops and mobile workstations powerful enough to breeze through CAD workflowslarge-scale codingrunning local AIor just writing up reports and engineering coursework.

The Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 3 is my top pick for almost every branch of engineering. This performance-led workstation laptop scored full marks after our reviewwhere we ran a series of CAD and coding testsdatabase managementand more. That iconic ThinkPad is just as comfortable to type on all-dayand somehoweven as a 16-inch beastit's lighter and more portable than the previous generation.

Recent updates

What's new? We've now conducted a comprehensive review of the ultra-powerful Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 3which now takes the top spot in this guide. But saying thatif you can only get hold of the Gen 2 modelit's still an excellent choice for engineering. I've also included two Dell Pro Max Plus laptopswhich offer desktop-class power in a laptop.

Best laptop for engineering students overall

Our top pick for engineering students

Specifications

CPU: Up to Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX
Graphics: Up to Nvidia RTX PRO 5000 Blackwell Generation
RAM: Up to 192GB
Screen: 16-inch 3.2K Tandem OLED
Storage: Up to 12TB
Dimensions: 0.62 – 0.82 x 14.25 x 9.92in / 1.58 – 2.09 x 36.2 x 25.2cm

Reasons to buy

+
Powerhouse
+
Portable
+
Ports
+
Performance
+
Particularly great screen

Reasons to avoid

-
Massive 16-inch computer can be hard to carry
-
Needs a massive brick to charge
Buy it if…

✅ You want a workstation with fantastic power: The Lenovo ThinkPad P16 offers workstation-levels of performancepacked with outstanding specs that will make running CAD tools smooth and responsive.

✅ You want a comfortable typing experience: Like all ThinkPadsthe P16 has a keyboard I absolutely lovedelivering an excellent typing experiencewhich will be useful for all your reportsessaysand more.

Don’t buy it if…

You're on a budget or do not need high-end specs: This laptop is definitely not for those looking for a cheap laptop to just get them by. This is a high-end machine.

You need an ultra-portable laptop: The P16 Gen 3 may be lighter than the previous modelbut it's still a heavy laptop that's best-suited to setting up in one or two locations during the dayrather than being lugged around from place to place.

The P16 series has consistently impressed during review. Ultra-powerful and with a superbly comfortable keyboard - the the best you can get on any laptop in my experience. Soit makes typing out essaysreportslong lines of code so much more comfortable. But that's not the star of the show with the Lenovo P16 Gen 3.

Having tested this laptopI found the screen is fantasticthe internals are wonderfulthe ports are expansiveand the capabilities feel endless. Once you’ve got the features set up rightwhen you walk away from the machineit will dim and hide your contentwhen you step up closer to the screenit will brighten upand prep for unlockand a few other core things.

This machine feels like it knows youlike it can help you prepare for workand like it's a co-workeror an assistantrather than something you have to deal with.

Keep in mindyou’ll need a good-sized backpack to tote around this 16-inch beastand since it’s a pretty expensive machineI’d suggest not just tossing this on your back while whizzing across campus on a skateboardbut you can do as you wish.

In our own teststhis one capably handled general creative tasks like video editingas well as 3D renderingCADand AI workloads. Beyond thatI tested out its capabilities when dealing with large-scale database managementlight engineeringvideo conversionand NAS management. Throughout all my heavy workloadsI was thrilled to find I can run them all without having to close down programs.

Nowit's not a cheap mobile workstationbut once you recover from that hitI really don’t think you will regret this purchase. Yesit is a largeheavy machine - but I'm pleased to report that it's lighterruns coolerand boasts better battery life than the already excellent P16 Gen 2 model. Overallit easily and effortlessly scored 5 stars in my review.

Read our full Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 3 review

Best laptop for engineering students on a budget

Great value with Nvidia RTX graphics

Specifications

CPU: Up to AMD Ryzen 7 8845HS / Intel Core i7-13650HX
Graphics: Up to NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 / AMD Radeon RX 8700M
RAM: Up to 16GB
Screen: 15.6-inchFHD or QHD
Storage: Up to 1TB
Dimensions: 14.16 x 10.43 x 0.99 in / 35.96 x 26.48 x 2.52 cm

Reasons to buy

+
Solid gaming performance
+
Fast refresh rate
+
Good thermal efficiency

Reasons to avoid

-
Inconvenient port placement
-
On the heavy side
Buy it if…

You want an affordable gaming laptop: Deriving its heritage from Lenovo's Legion line-upit's particularly adept at running CAD software.

You want a laptop that can handle heavy workloads: We liked the thermal efficiency of this machine for performance without throttling.

Don’t buy it if…

You need a long-lasting battery: Battery life is only fairoffering only about 6.5 hours of general usage and far less when pushed to its limits.

Ultra-portability is important to you: It's about as portable as you'd expect a decked-out budget laptop to beand weighs in at 5.3lbs.

The Lenovo LOQ 15 is a budget student and gaming laptop that's well-specced for a range of engineering tasks thanks to its H-series CPUdedicated graphics cardand - most interestingly - an MUX switch that connects the GPU directly to the display. Ohand add in the ever-excellent Lenovo keyboard for a more comfortable typing experience.

We found performance to be good across the board (we chiefly tested it on resource-heavy gameswhere it proved to be "rock-solid"). It's available in a range of configurations. But for engineeringI'd recommend a minimum 16GB RAM and ideally an AMD CPUas it offers excellent multi-core performance for smoothly running CAD software. I also find it's better for cooling during heavy workloads compared to Intel chips.

Budget alternatives to consider include the HP Victus 15 and the MSI Katana 15 - both reasonably pricedbut I'd opt for the Lenovo machine for its more robust build qualitycomfortable keyboardMUX switchand general performance.

Read our full Lenovo LOQ 15 review

Best laptop for engineering students running heavy CAD

Desktop performance in a laptop

Specifications

CPU: Up to Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX
Graphics: Up to Nvidia RTX PRO 3000 Blackwell12 GB
RAM: Up to 64GB
Screen: 16-inch4K OLED
Storage: Up to 4TB
Dimensions: 0.68-0.75 x 14.17 x 10.18in / 1.73-1.89 x 36.00 x 25.86cm

Reasons to buy

+
Desktop performance
+
Portable enough to put in a backpack
+
Dual Thunderbolt 5
+
Gorgeous OLED Panel (3860x2400)
+
Great Ports
+
280W Fast Charging

Reasons to avoid

-
High Price
-
Fast charger adds a lot of weight
-
"Portable" yet hefty
-
Only 500 nits
Buy it if…

You want a machine that can tackle desktop duties: The Pro Max 16 Plus stunned us with its sheer powerdelivering desktop-class performance throughout our tests.

You want one of the most portable mobile workstation around: While it's not totally compactits size and weight make it portable enough to carry in a large backpack.

Don’t buy it if…

You’re working to a budget: This is an expensive unitas you'd expect with specs like these.

You're working outside or under bright lights: One of the biggest issues we found was the limited 500 nits brightness of the display. Bright enoughof coursebut it may prove a problem in direct sunlight or very bright lights of a studio or workshop.

For heavy duty workloads where you need desktop-class powerthe Dell Pro Max 16 Plus is a phenomenally good Windows 11 Pro laptop.

Performance proved to be superb during our tests. We tried it running local dev environmentslarge codebaseslarge CAD fileslocal LLMsand just about every productivity app we could lay our hands on. And the laptop never missed a beat.

On top of thatthe machine features Thunderbolt 5 connectivitya glorious 16in screen (in either FHD+ or OLEDdepending the configuration). Even the keyboard proved more than comfortable for all-day typing. Not quite as good as a ThinkPadbut as close as you can get.

There's not much in it between this machine and the ThinkPad P16 - both are high-costenterprise-grade mobile workstations that are future-proofed for the duration of your class and even professional life. For meit's really a case of pick your poison here. I prefer the ThinkPad for the keyboardbut the Pro Max 16 Plus for its slightly better portability.

Read our full Dell Pro Max 16 Plus review

Best MacBook laptop for software engineering students

Workstation-like performance for heavy workloads

Specifications

CPU: Apple M4 Pro - M4 Max
Graphics: Up to 40-core GPU
RAM: Up to 48GB
Screen: 16-inch3456 x 2234 Liquid Retina XDR display
Storage: Up to 1TB
Dimensions: 14.01 x 9.77 x 0.66 in / 35.6 x 24.8 x 1.7cm

Reasons to buy

+
Another leap in performance
+
Still a great display
+
Thunderbolt 5 support

Reasons to avoid

-
Price
-
No new design
Buy it if…

You want best-in-class performance: In our teststhe M4 Pro chip delivered impressive performance across the boardfrom lightweight office tasks to heavy-duty workloads like CAD and video editing.

You want the best display you can get: With its 16in Liquid Retina Displaythis is still the best screen you can get on any laptop - and also boasts True Tone technology and a Wide P3 gamut.

Don’t buy it if…

You’re on a budget: It’s a powerful and beautiful laptopbut the MacBook Pro isn’t a cheap device by any stretch of the imagination. Nor does it seriously out-perform the older M3 Pro - it is an improvementbut not a ground-breaking one.

Your course uses Windows apps: Alrightmost apps these days work across Windows and macOSbut certain mechanical engineering apps won't and your engineering course may be limited to software on Windows.

The Apple MacBook Pro is arguably one of the best laptops around - beautifully designedthe high-performance M4 Pro version is effectively a workstation that will effortlessly power you through your engineering course.

In our benchmarkingperformance was excellent in both simulated and real-world testsand using the MacBook Pro 16in left us impressed. It’s fastresponsiveshowing no slowdown of lagging even with multiple apps open at once. But thenthat’s to be expected. It’s built to tackle heavy workloads like design to 4K video editing (and performed these well during our time with the machine.

Overallwe found it silent and efficient regardless of what we threw at it. Better stillbattery life is absolutely exceptional. In our testingwe squeezed over 21 hours of life from it on a single charge. This is going to be a life-saver for those working on campus - you won’t need to worry about hunting down a mains outlet. Nor did we feel performance was throttled in any way while running off the battery.

It’s not a cheap laptopof courseand total overkill for everyday tasks like running office apps. And if you already own the M3 Pro modelI wouldn’t recommend upgrading if you don’t want to - the M4 Pro didn’t offer that much of a performance boost in our testsand the design is basically identical. But if you want Apple’s latest and greatestthere’s a lot to like with the new MacBook Pro.

Read our full Apple MacBook Pro 16in (M4 Pro) review

Best 2-in-1 laptop for engineering students

For the best of both worlds

Specifications

CPU: AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370
Graphics: Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 - 4070
RAM: Up to 32GB
Screen: 13.3-in3K OLED
Storage: Up to 1TB
Dimensions: 11.74 × 8.26 x 0.62 in∼0.70 in / 29.82 ×20.99 × 1.58 ∼ 1.77 cm

Reasons to buy

+
Hybrid design
+
Highly sensitive touchscreen
+
Very powerful processor and CPU

Reasons to avoid

-
Expensive for its size
Buy it if…

You want a versatile 2-in-1 laptop: The Asus ProArt PX13 offers great flexibilityallowing you to switch between laptop and tablet modes for a variety of tasks.

You need a convertible laptop with a dedicated GPU: Most two-in-one devices only come with integrated graphicswhich isn't ideal for engineering students - but this machine is one of the few exceptions.

Don’t buy it if…

You’re looking for a budget laptop: The ProArt PX13 may feel a little expensive for its sizemaking it less suitable for those on a tight budget.

You need a larger screen: One of the compromises of this 2-in-1 is the screenwhich is 13.3in. Good for portabilitybut not if you want a bigger display.

Effectively designed for creative professionalsthe Asus ProArt PX13 is one of the few 2-in-1 laptops with a dedicated GPU rather an integrated graphicsso it's a good choice for engineering students looking for a little more versatility without compromising on graphical performance.

On the design sidewe found the laptop's build quality was exceptionalwhile remaining slim and compact - which is what you want from a 2-in-1 that flips between laptop and tablet mode. Despite its sizeit still packs in an AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 chipand a Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 or 4070 GPUdepending on your configuration. Connectivity is also good herewith all the ports you'll likely need for any engineering classincluding two USB4 ports. Better yetthere's also a stylus with a 4096-pressure sensitivitywhich felt very precise in our hands.

Performance proved great throughout our testingwhether we were running standard office software or 4K editing and grading. Even gaming was a smooth experience. Soon that scoreyou should have no issues using any standard engineering apps for modeling and rendering. Switching between tablet and laptop modes is a dreamit takes seconds and it's seamlessand I really like the fact that this comes with a full-sized keyboard and large trackpadso againno compromises there.

Where you will be making a compromisehoweveris on the screenwhich is 13.3in. It's crisp and vibrantbeing an OLEDbut for some engineering tasksyou may prefer a large display. For a super-portable 2-in-1 laptop with a discrete GPUthoughit feels like a fair tradeespecially with these performance levels.

Read our full Asus ProArt PX13 review

Best 18in laptop for engineering students

A big-screen heavy-hitter

Specifications

CPU: Up to Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX vPro
Graphics: Up to Nvidia RTX PRO 3000 Blackwell12 GB
RAM: Up to 64GB
Screen: 18-inch2.5K
Storage: Up to 1TB
Dimensions: 0.71-1.25 x 15.83 x 11.02in / 1.79-3.17 x 40.20 x 28.00cm

Reasons to buy

+
Positively powerful
+
Massive 18-inch display
+
Powerful Ports
+
Great keyboard

Reasons to avoid

-
Shockingly expensive
-
Very heavy
-
Display is goodnot great
Buy it if…

You need one of the most powerful laptops we've ever tested: We still can't quite get over how powerful the Pro Max 18 Plus issmashing through our tests with total ease.

You want a largestunning display: The 18-inch QHD+ display with 100% DCI-P3 and a 120Hz refresh rate that's ideal for smoothing out motion while 3D rendering.

Don’t buy it if…

You are on a tight budget: This is one seriously expensive machine - but thenit's performance-driven and fully speccedso that's to be expected.

You're working across multiple locations: Good griefwe found this laptop to be particularly heavywith a starting weight of 7.17 lb (3.25kg).

This was the workstation we described as "the developer’s dream machinethe coder's crutchand the engineer's engine" in our review. It's one of the most powerful machines we've ever testedflying through a host of demanding workloads as easily as if we were making notes in Microsoft Notepad.

During our reviewthis laptop capably handled running large repos on GitHubdatabases in DBeaverprojects in VS Codeand multiple other projects simultaneously. It never broke a sweatwith load times so fastwe barely had time to think.

Nowit is admittedly largeheavyand cumbersome. SoI wouldn't recommend carting this one all over campus. And yesit may be overkill for a first-year engineering coursebut specced as it is (and priced as it is)it's more an investment to last well beyond your course and into your professional life.

But if high-performance with a beautiful big screen is what you want from a machinethere aren't many that come close to the Pro Max 18 Plus.

Read our full Dell Pro Max 18 Plus review

Best MacBook Pro alternative laptop for engineering students

Stunning screen and top performance

Specifications

CPU: AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370
Graphics: Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 - 5070
RAM: Up to 64GB
Screen: 16-inch4K OLED; 3K OLED
Storage: Up to 4TB SSD
Dimensions: 13.97 x 9.72 x 0.59 ~ 0.68 in / 35.49 x 24.69 x 1.49 ~ 1.73 cm

Reasons to buy

+
Incredibly fast
+
Robust machine
+
Handy AI enhancements

Reasons to avoid

-
Overly glossy screen
-
Loud fans
-
Screen tilt limited
Buy it if…

You want a 4K screen: We found the 4K OLED screen here to be brightvibrantserving up plenty of detail. And while you may not need full color reproductionit even boasts 100% DCI-P3 with Pantone validation.

You want excellent performance: We loved how well the Asus ProArt P16 performed during testswhere it flew through a range of creative workloads without pausemaking it an effective MacBook rival.

Don’t buy it if…

You don’t need 4K: However gorgeous that screen isit’s not technically a requirement for engineering coursesalthough the RTX 5070 config has a 3K screen.

You want long battery life: As with most Windows laptops of this sort of specbattery life isn’t the longest - and it’s one area where it fails to compete against the MacBook Pro. You’ll need the proprietary adapter to charge it up.

For usthe Asus ProArt P16 H7606 is a solid alternative to the MacBook Pro in a number of areas. Performance is onewith this laptop absolutely breezing through heavy-duty creative workloads like design and video editing.

What really stands out to mehoweveris the 4K OLED display here (although the model with the RTX 5070 graphics caps out at 3K). If you’re looking for a vibrantdetailed screen on a laptopthen this is it. While a wide color gamut isn’t strictly necessary for engineering studentsI’m happy to see 100% DCI-P3 with Pantone validationmaking it ideal for other creative tasks like photo and video editing. I also like the fact that there’s touch capabilities herewith a 4096 pressure sensitivity and stylus included in the box.

Arguablythe weakest area here is the battery life - it gets absolutely eaten away when performing heavy-duty tasks such as 4K video editing. We clocked it at an hour and eighteen minutes during our editing tests. And you’ll need to use the proprietary charger to charge it. No using a USB-C in a pinch here.

Price isn’t exactly budgetbut you’re getting a lot of laptop for the money here. Outside of upgraded graphicsthere isn't a massive difference between this 2025 model and the previous ProArt P16and both are very suitable for engineering courses.

Read our full Asus ProArt P16 H7606 review

Best laptops for engineering students compared

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Model

Screen

CPU

GPU

RAM

Storage

Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 3

16in3.2K

Up to Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX

Up to Nvidia RTX PRO 5000 Blackwell

Up to 192GB

Up to 12TB

Lenovo LOQ 15

15.6-inchFHD or QHD

Up to AMD Ryzen 7 8845HS / Intel Core i7-13650HX

Up to NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 / AMD Radeon RX 8700M

Up to 16GB

Up to 1TB

Dell Pro Max 16 Plus

16in4K

Up to Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX

Up to Nvidia RTX PRO 3000 Blackwell

Up to 64GB

Up to 4TB 

Apple MacBook Pro 16-inch (M4 Pro)

16in4K

Apple M4 Pro - M4 Max

Up to 40-core GPU

Up to 48GB

Up to 1TB

Asus ProArt PX13

13.3in3K

AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370

Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 - 4070

Up to 32GB

Up to 1TB

Dell Pro Max 18 Plus

18in2.5K

Up to Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX

Up to Nvidia RTX PRO 3000 Blackwell

Up to 64GB

Up to 1TB

Asus ProArt P16

16in4K

AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370

Nvidia GeForce RTX 4050 - 4070

Up to 64GB

Up to 2TB

Best laptops for engineering students: FAQs

What are the minimum laptop requirements for engineering students?

Laptops suitable for engineering students need to have that balance between processor performance and graphical prowessparticularly if you use CAD tools like Solidworks. Howeverthe full specs will depend on which branch of engineering you're studying.

Here's what I'd look for as the absolute minimum specs when choosing a laptop for any engineering course. If your budget stretches to a higher-spec machineI'd recommend it - especially if you want a more seamless experience.

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Component

Minimum

Recommended

Best

CPU

Intel Core i5-12500H / AMD Ryzen 5 7640HS

Intel Core i7-13620H / AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS

Intel Core i9-14900HX / AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX

GPU

Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050

Nvidia GeForce RTX 4050 or RTX 4060

Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 or above

RAM

16GB

16GB

32GB

Storage

512GB

1TB

1TB or above

Display

14in or 15.6in1920x1080

16in to 18in1920x1080 or 2560x1440

15.6in or 16in2560x1440

Are Apple laptops good for engineering students?

Are MacBooks good for engineering students?

Apple MacBooks have always been a solid competitor in the world of laptops for engineers. With the recent jump to Apple's own silicon with the M1 and M2 chipsthese laptops have gotten even more efficient and even better at multitasking while also powering through even the largest of programs and tasks.

Howeverthe issue is that many engineering programslike those from Autodeskwill only work on the Windows operating system. If in doubtask your school or college which software you'll be using on your course.

If you do decide to buy an Apple MacBook Procheck out our Apple promo codes to save money on your purchase.

Do engineering students need a powerful laptop?

Engineering students need a powerful laptop - although this need is balanced by the portability of the device and the type of software that's being run.

Using engineering programs pushes devices far harder thansaythe best laptops for writers. Even the best laptops for programming won't work as hard as laptops for engineering students.

Ultimatelya CAD or SolidWorks window pulls significantly more power than a text document or web search. As sucha dedicated GPU and plenty of RAM are key requirements. CPU is more dependent on the chosen softwarebut make sure the processor is the high-performance H-series or HX-series.

How to choose the best engineering laptop for you

When choosing the best laptop for an engineering studentthere are a number of factors to consider.

A great laptop for engineering students must operate high-powered applications simultaneously with many open program windows - a CAD windowa large mapping serviceand a large Excel sheet. Since you will likely be using complex programs like AutoCADMATLABand SolidWorksyou will need a laptop with sufficient power to run them smoothly and effectively.

Specs

For an uninterrupted workflowlook for laptops spec'd with the latest Intel Core i5 or Core i7 / AMD Ryzen 5 or 7 H-series chipsa minimum RTX 3050 GPU512GB SSD storageand 16GB of RAM – although 32GB is even better. Scroll up to see my table for the minimumrecommendedand best component requirements.

Display

I recommend a 15.6in FHD display - although 14in is fineand 16in -18in is preferred if you're using multiple windows. So long as the resolution is at least 1080pyou should be fine.

Battery life

Engineering projects are going to eat away at the batteryso try to get one that lasts as long as possible before needing a recharge. Nothing compares to the MacBook Pro in this regard. Laptops for engineering students tend to require proprietary chargersso take that into consideration as it can affect portability.

Software requirements

If you know which software you'll be using in classcheck the minimum requirements - then try to beat those specsprioritizing RAM and GPUas the performance will be much better. I've listed the spec requirements in the table above.

School requirements

It's worth asking your schoolcollegeor university if they have preferred machineor minimum hardware specifications. In many instancesthe engineering software you use will be restricted to a particular operating system - usually Windows - so it's best to get that information before committing.

How we test the best laptops for engineering students

Why you can trust TechRadar

✅ More than 1,800 laptopsChromebooksand MacBooks reviewed
15 years of product testing
✅ Over 16,000 products reviewed in total
✅ Nearly 200,000 hours testing tech

Our team of reviewers have tested hundreds of the best laptops to find the top-rated for students. We take the same rigorous approach to our review process whether we’re reviewing the best laptops for MBA studentscomparing the specs of the best laptops for computer science studentsor benchmarking the performances of the best laptops for architecture students.

Designdimensions & durability

After unboxingour testing panel starts by assessing the overall size and design of each laptop. For the best engineering laptops for studentswe're looking for good portability (or as good as can be for a component-laden machine built for heavy workloads)with a robust build quality that can withstand a busy commutecrossing campusand from dorms to libraries to labs.

Spec comparison

Before we even begin full performance testingwe compare specs - it gives us an idea of what to expect and how it will likely perform against the competition. If a laptop fails to meet the minimum requirements as shown in the table aboveit's an immediate disqualification for the guide.

Benchmarking

As part of every review processwe run simulated benchmarking tests using industry-standard tools like 3D Mark and CineBench. After thatwe conduct real-world performance testsrecording performance in a series of tasks that we'd expect it to be used insuch as running heavy compute tasks or playing resource-intensive gaming titles. We compare this to benchmarking results to see if simulations bear out. This gives us a clear idea of how well it runs day-to-day.

Battery life

We undertake a full battery life test to see how well it measures up to a manufacturer’s generous claims - because being able to work on the move is essential here. This is a standardized testrunning a FHD movie with aeroplane mode switched on and brightness set to 50%. We'll also record battery life under a range general uselike browsing and streamingand heavy use like gaming.

Ports & connectivity

We also assess connectivity and port selection and placement. Modern laptops for engineering students shouldat minimuminclude USB-A or USB-Cbut the more they have they better it is. In an ideal worldthis would include a standard charging portbut given that these laptops demand an excessive amount of powerwe often find they have a proprietary charger.

Price & value

Once the testing team has compared every spectried every featureand explored performance for a range of taskswe can then decide whether the price offers good value for moneyand how it measures up against others at a similar price-point. At the budget endwe're not looking for the cheapest laptops possiblebut those that offer long-term value for a reasonable costto make sure any investment you make is worth your money.

You can find out more in our detailed guide How we test laptops and desktops: our reviewing process explained.

Steve Clark
B2B Editor - Creative & Hardware

Steve is B2B Editor for Creative & Hardware at TechRadar Prohelping business professionals equip their workspace with the right tools. He tests and reviews the softwarehardwareand office furniture that modern workspaces depend oncutting through the hype to zero in on the real-world performance you won't find on a spec sheet. He is a relentless champion of the Oxford comma.

With contributions from