Apple iPad 11" A16 Chip Kit Silver 2025 Review

Apple's new 11-inch iPad packs a pro-level A16 chip into a consumer-friendly body. It's a media powerhouse, but our tests show it struggles as a laptop replacement.

CPU Apple A16
RAM 6 GB
Storage 128 GB
Screen 11" 2360x1640
OS iPadOS
Stylus Yes
Cellular No
Battery 29 Wh
Apple iPad 11" A16 Chip Kit Silver 2025 tablet
82.4 Overall Score

Overview

So, Apple's new 11-inch iPad. It's the one that's supposed to be the sweet spot, right? You get the modern design, that great Liquid Retina screen, and now they've dropped the A16 chip from the iPhone 15 Pro into it. That's a serious move. It's not the M-series power of the Pro, but for most people just browsing, streaming, and maybe playing a few games, it's way more than enough.

This iPad is really for the person who wants a premium-feeling tablet without the Pro price tag. Think students taking notes, someone reading comics or books in bed, or a family sharing it for videos and casual games. The benchmarks confirm it's a fantastic entertainment device, scoring over 61 out of 100 in that category. It feels fast, the screen is bright and sharp, and it's super portable at under 500 grams.

What makes it interesting, and maybe a little confusing, is where it sits. It's got pro-level chip architecture from last year in a decidedly non-pro body. You don't get the ProMotion 120Hz screen, the Thunderbolt port, or the fancy Face ID system. But you do get that A16 muscle, which means this thing will stay smooth and supported for years. It's Apple's play to make the 'regular' iPad feel future-proof.

Performance

Let's talk about those numbers. The A16 chip lands in the 60th percentile for CPU performance and 59th for GPU. That sounds middle-of-the-road, but context is everything. We're comparing it against everything, including high-end Windows tablets and dedicated gaming handhelds. For iPadOS and the tasks this tablet is built for, it's blisteringly fast. Apps open instantly, and you can have a dozen Safari tabs, a video playing, and a game paused in the background with zero stutter. The 6GB of RAM helps a ton here, sitting in the 52nd percentile.

The real-world takeaway is simple: you will not feel this iPad slowing down. Ever. Gaming is great for titles like Genshin Impact or Divinity: Original Sin 2 at high settings. The 4-core GPU handles them easily. Where the performance story gets a bit thin is in pro workflows. That 41.2/100 productivity score tells the tale. It can run Lightroom or LumaFusion, but complex multi-app workflows, heavy file management, or connecting to multiple external displays? That's where you hit the limits of iPadOS and the hardware's more consumer-focused design.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 71.1
GPU 71.7
RAM 65.9
Screen 78.5
Battery 96.7
Feature 93.4
Storage 55.1
User Sentiment 70.1
Connectivity 89.9
Social Proof 99.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong connectivity (83th percentile) 99th
  • Strong screen (71th percentile) 97th

Cons

  • Below average feature (21th percentile)

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Apple A16
Cores 5
GPU Apple (4-Core)

Memory & Storage

RAM 6 GB
Storage 128 GB
Expandable No

Display

Size 11"
Resolution 2360
Panel IPS
Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Brightness 500 nits

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 6
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.3
Cellular No

Features

Stylus Support Yes
Stylus Model Apple Pencil (USB-C)
Fingerprint Reader Yes
Face Unlock No

Physical

Weight 0.5 kg / 1.0 lbs
Battery 29 Wh
OS iPadOS

Value & Pricing

Here's the tricky part: the price. Looking across vendors, it seems to hover right around $329 to $349. For that money, you are getting an incredible chip and a lovely screen in a great body. The value is in longevity and that premium Apple feel.

But, you have to be honest about what you're buying. It's a fantastic entertainment slate and a capable casual device. If your needs stop there, it's a great deal. The moment you start thinking about it as a laptop replacement for real work, the value proposition gets shaky. You'd need to add a keyboard and pencil, pushing the total cost much higher, and you'd still be working within iPadOS's constraints.

vs Competition

This iPad sits in a crowded field. The obvious competitor is the iPad Pro with the M5 chip. The Pro is in another league for performance and has a sublime 120Hz screen, but it costs more than twice as much. For pure media consumption and light tasks, the A16 iPad gets you 90% of the way there for half the price.

Then you have the Windows side, like the Microsoft Surface Pro 11. That's a full Windows PC. Its productivity score will dwarf this iPad's. If you need to run desktop Photoshop, Excel, or any x86 software, the Surface is the only choice. But as a pure, lean-back tablet experience? iPadOS is much more intuitive and fun. The Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra is another Android alternative with a stunning OLED screen and great multitasking, but its app ecosystem for tablets still lags behind Apple's. You're choosing between a better pure tablet (iPad) and devices that are better at being computers (Surface, maybe the Tab with Dex).

Spec Apple iPad 11" A16 Chip Kit Samsung Galaxy Tab S Samsung 14.6" Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra 1TB Multi-Touch Lenovo Idea Tab Lenovo - Idea Tab Pro - 12.7" 3K Tablet - 8GB RAM Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft 12" Surface Pro Copilot+ PC, Snapdragon Xiaomi Pad 7 PRO Xiaomi Pad 7 Pro Ai WiFi Version Global (No Calls Teclast TECLAST T65PLUS 13.4-Inch Android 15 Tablet 2025,
CPU Apple A16 MediaTek 9300 MediaTek Dimensity Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-64-100 3 GHz 2.2 GHz
RAM (GB) 6 16 8 16 12 8
Storage (GB) 128 1024 256 512 512 256
Screen 11" 2360x1640 14.6" 2960x1848 12.7" 2944x1840 12" 2196x1464 11.2" 3200x2136 13.4" 1920x1200
OS iPadOS Android 14 Android 14 Windows 11 Home Android 14 HyperOS Android 15
Stylus true true true true false false
Cellular false false false false false true
Battery (Wh) 29 - - 38 - -
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamScreenBatteryFeatureStorageUser SentimentConnectivitySocial Proof
Apple iPad 11" A16 Chip Kit 71.171.765.978.596.793.455.170.189.999.3
Samsung Galaxy Tab S 14.6" 10 Ultra Compare 7272.690.795.695.199.896.58496.299.3
Lenovo Idea Tab Pro 12.7" 3K Compare 43.745.374.692.294.995.774.191.196.299.3
Microsoft Surface Pro 12" Compare 98.71.49558.999.294.291.9096.297
Xiaomi Pad 7 PRO Pad 7 Pro Ai Compare 81.281.484.699.246.2588870.156.392.6
Teclast T65PLUS 13.4-Inch Android 15 Tablet 2025 Compare 73.57474.644.394.726.974.170.192.895.1

Verdict

If you want the best simple tablet money can buy for watching shows, reading, browsing the web, and playing mobile games, this 11-inch iPad is an easy recommendation. The A16 chip ensures it won't feel old anytime soon, and the overall package is polished and delightful to use.

However, if you're looking at this as a primary device for getting serious work done, you should pause. The low productivity score is a real warning. Consider spending more for an iPad Pro if you're locked into Apple's ecosystem, or look seriously at a Windows 2-in-1 like the Surface Pro. This iPad excels as a secondary device, not a primary workhorse.