Lenovo Tab M9 Lenovo Tab M9, 9" IPS 400 nits, 4GB, 64GB Review

The Lenovo Tab M9 offers long battery life and a famous brand name for just $110, but its terrible screen is a hard compromise to accept for daily use.

CPU Octa-Core
RAM 4 GB
Storage 64 GB
Screen 9" 1340x800
OS Android
Stylus No
Cellular No
Lenovo Tab M9 Lenovo Tab M9, 9" IPS  400 nits, 4GB, 64GB tablet
39.3 Totaalscore

Overview

So you're looking at the Lenovo Tab M9. It's a $110 Android tablet that promises 13 hours of battery life and a 'cinematic' 9-inch screen. If you just need a basic device for watching videos on a plane, reading Kindle books, or maybe running a simple drone app, this is squarely in your lane. It's not trying to be an iPad Pro.

What makes it interesting is the price. At $110, it's competing with no-name Amazon specials, not with Samsung or Apple. Lenovo is betting you'll pay a small premium for their brand name and software over a random 'N-one' tablet. The specs tell the story: a MediaTek processor, 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, and that HD screen. This is a device built for one thing: affordable, casual media consumption.

Honestly, the best way to think about the Tab M9 is as a dedicated screen. It's thin, light at 380g, and runs Android 12. The marketing talks about Google Lens and facial recognition, which are nice bonuses. But the core appeal is simple: a cheap, portable TV for your bag. Several customer reviews back this up, with people buying it specifically for long flights or as a display for their drones.

Performance

Let's talk about that MediaTek G80 processor and 4GB of RAM. In percentile rankings against all tablets, the CPU lands in the 40th percentile and the RAM is down at the 32nd. What does that mean in practice? For basic tasks like web browsing, streaming video, and using apps like Pandora or ChatGPT, it's perfectly fine. One 5-star reviewer specifically called out great speed for browsing and those apps. It won't feel snappy like a $500 tablet, but it shouldn't frustrate you for light use.

The real-world implication of these mid-to-low percentile scores shows up in two areas. First, gaming. The GPU is in the 42nd percentile, so while 'Power Play' is in the marketing, you're looking at casual games at best. Second, multitasking. With 4GB of RAM, don't expect to have ten browser tabs, a video stream, and a game all running smoothly. It's a one-or-two-app-at-a-time kind of device. The performance matches the price: adequate for the basics, but you're not getting any extra headroom.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 44.1
GPU 45.8
RAM 38.5
Screen 11.5
Battery 48.7
Feature 59
Storage 31.3
Connectivity 77.2
Social Proof 62.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The price is the biggest feature. At $110, it's a very low-risk entry into having a tablet. 77th
  • Battery life is solid. The 5100 mAh battery and promised 13-hour video playback are highlights, landing in the 48th percentile, which is decent for the class.
  • It's genuinely portable. At 380g and with a 9-inch form factor, it's easy to toss in a bag without adding much weight, perfect for travel.
  • Facial recognition login works well. Multiple customer reviews, including a 5-star one, praised it for being fast and convenient.
  • The speaker setup gets a nod. The description mentions Dolby Atmos-enhanced stereo speakers, and a reviewer noted the volume 'not bad,' which for a cheap tablet is a win.

Cons

  • The screen is a major weak point. A 9-inch, 1340x800 display lands in the 6th percentile. That's not really HD by modern standards, and it will look noticeably less sharp than almost any other tablet. 12th
  • Storage is limited at 64GB, and it's in the 29th percentile. You'll be managing your space or relying on cloud storage very quickly. 31th
  • The charger isn't included. A 3-star Spanish-language review explicitly complained that the tablets arrived 'sin el adaptador de carga' (without the charger), which is a frustrating cost-cutting move.
  • Connectivity is dated with 802.11g Wi-Fi, which is very old and slow. This will affect download speeds and streaming quality if you're not right next to the router.
  • It runs Android 12 out of the box. For a 2023 device, that's already behind, and future update support from Lenovo for such a budget model is questionable.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Octa-Core
GPU Mali-G52 MC2

Memory & Storage

RAM 4 GB
Storage 64 GB

Display

Size 9"
Resolution 1340
Panel IPS
Refresh Rate 60 Hz

Connectivity

Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.0

Physical

Weight 0.4 kg / 0.8 lbs
OS Android

Value & Pricing

The value proposition is brutally simple: it's $110. In the tablet world, that's the bargain bin, but with a Lenovo logo on it. You're paying for brand recognition and presumably better build quality and software stability than a truly off-brand 'N-one' tablet. The price-to-performance ratio is okay if your performance needs are 'watch videos and browse the web.'

Where the value gets tricky is when you look at the specs you're sacrificing, mainly that terrible screen. You have to ask yourself if saving money upfront is worth staring at a dull, low-resolution display for hours. For a dedicated kids' tablet or a pure beater device for travel, maybe. But if screen quality matters to you at all, this isn't it.

€ 225

vs Competition

The top competitors listed are in a totally different league. The Apple iPad Pro, Samsung Galaxy Tab S10+, and Microsoft Surface Pro are all premium devices costing many times more. They're not real competitors for someone looking at a $110 tablet. The more relevant comparisons are the 'Lenovo Idea Tab Pro' (a step up in Lenovo's own line) and the generic 'N-one Android Tablet.'

Compared to another Lenovo, the Idea Tab Pro has a better 12.7" 3K screen and 8GB of RAM, but it costs more. You're trading up in quality for more money. Compared to a no-name $80 tablet, the Tab M9 offers slightly more peace of mind with the Lenovo name, and features like facial recognition that might not be on the cheaper model. The trade-off is clear: accept the Tab M9's significant screen and storage limitations, or spend more for a better experience. There's no magic here.

Spec Lenovo Tab M9 Lenovo Tab M9, 9" IPS 400 nits, 4GB, 64GB Apple iPad Pro Apple 11" iPad Pro M5 Chip (Standard Glass, 512GB, Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft - Surface Pro - Copilot+ PC - 13” OLED Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Samsung 12.4" Galaxy Tab S10+ 256GB Multi-Touch Lenovo Yoga Tab Series Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus HP GPD Win MAX 2 2025 Handheld Gaming PC with AMD
CPU Octa-Core Apple M5 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 MediaTek 9300 Qualcomm® Snapdragon® 8 Gen 3, QCM8650 AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370
RAM (GB) 4 12 32 12 16 32
Storage (GB) 64 512 1000 256 256 2048
Screen 9" 1340x800 11" 2420x1668 13" 2880x1920 12.4" 2800x1752 12.7" 2944x1840 10.1" 1920x1200
OS Android iPadOS Windows 11 Home Android 14 Android 14 Windows 11 Home
Stylus false true true true false false
Cellular false false false false false false
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare

Verdict

If you need a disposable screen for very specific, simple tasks, the Tab M9 can work. Think: a dedicated display for your drone controller, a Netflix machine for the kids in the backseat, or a Kindle reader for your commute. The battery life and light weight are genuine perks for these uses. One happy customer even said it's 'great' for hosting drone apps.

But for almost anything else, I'd hesitate. If you're a student needing to read textbooks or take notes, the screen is too poor. If you want to do any real web browsing or multitasking, the 4GB of RAM and older Wi-Fi will hold you back. Its own 'Best for' scores are tellingly low across the board. For general use, saving up a bit more for a tablet with a better screen is a vastly better investment in your daily experience.