Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 7 16" 2000 Review

Lenovo put a breathtaking 4K OLED screen into the ThinkPad P1 Gen 7, then paired it with a GPU that can't keep up. At over $3300, that's a dealbreaker.

CPU Intel Core Ultra 7 155H
RAM 32 GB
Storage 1 TB
Screen 16" 3840x2160
GPU NVIDIA RTX 2000 Ada Generation
OS Windows 11 Pro, English
Weight 1.8 kg
Battery 90 Wh
Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 7 16" 2000 laptop
84.7 综合评分

Overview

The ThinkPad P1 Gen 7 is a laptop that can't decide what it wants to be. It's got a stunning 4K OLED screen that's perfect for movies and photo editing, but then it pairs that with a seriously underpowered GPU. The one thing you need to know? This is a fantastic mobile workstation for spreadsheets and presentations, but don't even think about using it for serious 3D work or modern gaming.

Performance

That 4K OLED screen is the star here. It's in the 92nd percentile, and it shows. Colors pop, blacks are infinite, and it's just gorgeous for media. But the performance story gets weird fast. The Intel 155H CPU is solid, landing in the 70th percentile, but the RTX 2000 GPU is a massive letdown, sitting in the bottom 18th percentile. It's fine for driving the display and light tasks, but it's not a creator or gaming GPU by 2024 standards. It feels like they put a commuter car engine in a race car body.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 76.1
GPU 84.5
RAM 85.8
Ports 82.7
Screen 94.9
Portability 25.7
Storage 83.7
Reliability 74.7
Social Proof 91.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The 4K OLED touchscreen is absolutely stunning. 95th
  • 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD are great starting points. 92th
  • ThinkPad reliability is well above average. 86th
  • The 16-core CPU handles multi-threaded work well. 85th

Cons

  • The RTX 2000 GPU is embarrassingly weak for this price. 26th
  • It's not compact at all, scoring in the 22nd percentile for size.
  • Port selection is abysmal, in the 7th percentile.
  • The value proposition is completely broken at over $3300.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core Ultra 7 155H
Cores 16
Frequency 1.4 GHz
L3 Cache 24 MB

Graphics

GPU NVIDIA RTX 2000 Ada Generation
Type discrete
VRAM 16 GB
VRAM Type GDDR6

Memory & Storage

RAM 32 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 1 TB
Storage Type NVMe SSD

Display

Size 16"
Resolution 3840 (4K UHD)
Panel OLED
Refresh Rate 60 Hz

Connectivity

Thunderbolt 2 x USB-C (Thunderbolt 4 / USB4 40Gbps), with USB PD 3.0 (135W input) and DisplayPort 2.1
HDMI 1 x HDMI 2.1
Wi-Fi WiFi 7
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.4

Physical

Weight 1.8 kg / 4.0 lbs
Battery 90 Wh
OS Windows 11 Pro, English

Value & Pricing

At $3369, this is a terrible value. You're paying a premium for the ThinkPad name and that beautiful screen, but you're getting last-generation GPU performance and poor portability. For this kind of money, you should get a complete package, not a compromised one.

Price History

CA$3,000 CA$4,000 CA$5,000 CA$6,000 CA$7,000 3月22日3月30日 CA$6,339

vs Competition

Compared to a MacBook Pro 14" with an M4 Max, the ThinkPad gets demolished in GPU performance and battery life, though the Mac's screen isn't OLED. The Lenovo Legion Pro 7i at a similar price offers a far more powerful GPU for gaming and creative work, but with a less refined screen. The real head-scratcher is the ASUS Zenbook Duo, which offers innovative dual-screen functionality for likely much less money, making the ThinkPad's single-screen premium hard to justify.

Verdict

I can't recommend the ThinkPad P1 Gen 7. Unless your workflow is 100% CPU-bound and you absolutely need that OLED touchscreen on Windows, look elsewhere. For creative work, a MacBook Pro or a Legion Pro is a better buy. For business, a cheaper ThinkPad with a better port selection makes more sense. This one tries to do everything and ends up not excelling at anything important for its price.