Lenovo IdeaPad Pro 5-2025 16" Review

The Lenovo IdeaPad Pro 5 pairs a gorgeous 16-inch OLED screen with a surprisingly slow single-core CPU, creating a laptop that's brilliant for media but frustrating for almost everything else.

CPU AMD Ryzen AI 7 350
RAM 16 GB
Storage 1 TB
Screen 16" 2880x1800
GPU 4 GB
OS Windows 11 Home
Weight 3.9 kg
Lenovo IdeaPad Pro 5-2025 16" laptop
51.4 Punteggio Complessivo

Overview

The Lenovo IdeaPad Pro 5-2025 is a bit of a puzzle. It's got this gorgeous 16-inch OLED screen that's smooth at 120Hz, which is fantastic for watching movies or scrolling through photos. But then you look under the hood and find a single-core AMD 350 CPU running at just 2.0GHz. That's a head-scratcher in 2025. This laptop feels built for someone who cares deeply about display quality for media consumption, but doesn't need much processing muscle for heavy tasks. It's a niche machine, and whether it's right for you depends entirely on what you prioritize. If you're all about that screen and basic tasks, keep reading. If you need to do anything demanding, you might want to look elsewhere right now.

Performance

Let's talk numbers. The CPU lands in the 3rd percentile. That's not a typo. A single-core, 2.0GHz processor in a modern laptop is going to struggle. Opening multiple browser tabs, running office apps, and even basic photo editing will feel sluggish compared to almost anything else on the market. The GPU, sitting in the 54th percentile, is the more capable part of the equation. With 4GB of VRAM, it can handle video playback and some light graphical work on that beautiful OLED panel, but the gaming score of 16.5/100 tells you everything you need to know about its limits for anything 3D. This isn't a machine for rendering or gaming.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 2.2
GPU 60.3
RAM 59.4
Ports 8.9
Screen 91.7
Portability 6
Storage 75.3
Reliability 74.7
Social Proof 14.2

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The 16-inch OLED display is stunning, ranking in the 89th percentile for sharpness and contrast. 92th
  • The 120Hz refresh rate makes everything from scrolling to video playback incredibly smooth. 75th
  • You get a full 1TB of fast SSD storage, which is a generous amount for media files. 75th
  • 16GB of DDR5 RAM is a solid foundation for multitasking, assuming the CPU can keep up.
  • The overall reliability score is decent at the 75th percentile, suggesting it should hold up well over time.

Cons

  • The AMD 350 single-core CPU is a massive bottleneck, ranking in the bottom 3% of all laptops. 2th
  • At 3.9kg (8.6 lbs), it's incredibly heavy for a non-gaming laptop, landing in the 6th percentile for portability. 6th
  • The port selection is severely limited, scoring in the 7th percentile. Expect to rely heavily on dongles. 9th
  • The GPU, while adequate for the display, is not suited for any modern gaming or creative 3D work. 14th
  • The overall score of 48.1/100 reflects fundamental compromises that make it hard to recommend for most users.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU AMD Ryzen AI 7 350
Cores 1
Frequency 2.0 GHz
L3 Cache 8 MB

Graphics

GPU 4 GB
VRAM 4 GB

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 1 TB
Storage Type SSD

Display

Size 16"
Resolution 2880
Panel OLED
Refresh Rate 120 Hz

Connectivity

Bluetooth Yes

Physical

Weight 3.9 kg / 8.6 lbs
OS Windows 11 Home

Value & Pricing

At $1359, the value proposition is tough. You're paying a premium for that excellent OLED screen and a large SSD, but you're saddled with a processor that belongs in a budget laptop from five years ago. For the same money, you could find laptops with far more balanced specs, including better CPUs, similar screens, and lighter designs. Lenovo is asking you to pay for the display and storage while accepting severe compromises everywhere else. It's a lopsided deal.

Price History

290.000 JPY 295.000 JPY 300.000 JPY 305.000 JPY 310.000 JPY 27 mar31 mar 292.337 JPY

vs Competition

Compared to something like the ASUS Zenbook Duo, you lose the innovative dual-screen functionality and get a much heavier, less portable machine with a worse CPU. The Zenbook would likely be more versatile for the price. Against the Apple MacBook Pro 14" with an M4 chip, there's simply no contest in performance or efficiency, though you'd pay more. Even within Lenovo's own lineup, a Legion Pro 7i gaming laptop at a similar price point would offer a massively better CPU and GPU for creative work, albeit with a different type of screen. The IdeaPad Pro 5's main advantage is its OLED panel, but every competitor forces a trade-off you need to consider.

Verdict

This is a hard laptop to recommend for general use. If your entire workflow is watching high-quality video, editing photos where color accuracy is paramount, and doing very basic web browsing, the screen might justify the cost and the weight. For literally anyone else—students, business users, casual gamers, content creators—the anemic CPU is a deal-breaker. You'll feel that slowdown every day. My advice? Only consider this if the OLED screen is your absolute top priority and you're willing to accept severe performance limitations in every other area. For everyone else, there are better, more balanced options out there.