HP OmniBook 5 OmniBook 5 14-he0020nr 14" Review

The HP OmniBook 5 offers a great OLED screen at a low price, but its Qualcomm chip delivers sluggish performance that lands in the bottom quarter of all laptops.

CPU Snapdragon
RAM 16 GB
Storage 512 GB
Screen 14" 2048x1080
GPU Qualcomm
OS Windows 11 Home
Weight 1.3 kg
Battery 59 Wh
HP OmniBook 5 OmniBook 5 14-he0020nr 14" laptop
46.2 Pontuação Geral

Overview

The HP OmniBook 5 14-he0020nr is a laptop built around a big question: can Qualcomm's new Copilot+ chip make Windows on Arm feel fast? At $700, it's priced to answer that. You get a 14-inch OLED screen, 16GB of RAM, and 512GB of storage in a package that scores well for being compact. But the numbers tell a clear story: this isn't a machine for heavy lifting. Its CPU and GPU performance land in the 23rd and 18th percentiles, respectively. That puts it squarely in the 'basic tasks' category, with gaming scoring an abysmal 11 out of 100.

Performance

Let's be direct about the performance. The Qualcomm Snapdragon X chip inside is aiming for efficiency, not raw power. A CPU percentile of 23 means it's slower than about three-quarters of the laptops we track. You'll be fine for web browsing, document editing, and streaming video, but don't expect to compile code or run complex simulations quickly. The GPU is even more limited, sitting at the 18th percentile. This thing is not for gaming or creative apps like video editing. The bright spot is the 14-inch OLED display, which hits the 68th percentile. Colors will pop, and watching movies will look great, which fits its decent 'entertainment' score of 47.8.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 74.8
GPU 19.9
RAM 59.4
Ports 33
Screen 70.8
Portability 84.5
Storage 57.2
User Sentiment 11.8
Reliability 29.4
Social Proof 17.2

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The 14-inch OLED screen is a standout, ranking in the 68th percentile for visual quality. 85th
  • Its compact design scores a 67th percentile, making it easy to carry around. 75th
  • At $700, it's an affordable entry point to try the new Copilot+ Windows on Arm platform. 71th
  • 16GB of RAM lands right at the 50th percentile, which is plenty for everyday multitasking.
  • Wi-Fi 6E ensures you'll have modern wireless connectivity.

Cons

  • CPU performance is a major weakness, sitting in the bottom quartile at the 23rd percentile. 12th
  • GPU performance is even worse at the 18th percentile, ruling out any serious gaming or creative work. 17th
  • The 512GB SSD is below average, landing in the 34th percentile for storage capacity. 20th
  • Port selection is limited, scoring only in the 29th percentile. 29th
  • Its reliability score is concerningly low at the 27th percentile.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Snapdragon
Cores 8

Graphics

GPU Qualcomm

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type NVMe SSD

Display

Size 14"
Resolution 2048
Panel OLED

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 6E
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.3

Physical

Weight 1.3 kg / 2.8 lbs
Battery 59 Wh
OS Windows 11 Home

Value & Pricing

At $700, the value proposition is all about the screen and the form factor. You're paying for that nice OLED panel and a portable design. The performance hardware you get for that money, however, is underwhelming. The CPU and GPU percentiles are low enough that you're making a significant trade-off. If your budget is rigidly $700 and you prioritize media consumption and portability over speed, it has a case. But if you can stretch your budget, even a little, you'll find much faster Intel or AMD-based machines at similar prices.

Price History

US$ 640 US$ 660 US$ 680 US$ 700 US$ 720 18 de fev.21 de mar. US$ 650

vs Competition

Compared to its peers, the OmniBook 5 is in a weird spot. The Apple MacBook Pro with M4 is in a different league performance-wise, but also a different price bracket. A more direct competitor is something like an ASUS Zenbook with an Intel Core Ultra processor. You'd likely get a similar OLED screen, but with CPU performance in the 60th or 70th percentile instead of the 20s, for maybe a couple hundred dollars more. Even compared to gaming laptops like the MSI Vector or Gigabyte AORUS—which are overkill for this use case—it highlights the gap: those machines have GPUs in the 90th percentile. The OmniBook is for a very specific, lightweight user.

Verdict

Here's the deal. The HP OmniBook 5 14-he0020nr is a niche product. If you absolutely must have a Windows laptop with an OLED screen under $800, and you only do very basic computing, it's an option. The display is genuinely good. But for almost anyone else, the performance numbers are a deal-breaker. A CPU in the 23rd percentile and a gaming score of 11/100 are hard data points you can't ignore. We can't recommend it for students needing reliability (27th percentile) or anyone doing more than the bare minimum. Look for a sale on a last-gen Intel or AMD ultrabook instead; you'll get more speed for your money.