BOOX BOOX Tablet 10.3" Note Air 5 C 6G 64G E Ink Tablet Review
The BOOX Note Air 5 C is a brilliant digital notebook and a terrible tablet. We'll tell you if this $530 E Ink device is the paper replacement you need, or a confusing purchase you'll regret.
The 30-Second Version
The BOOX Note Air 5 C is a brilliant digital notebook and a terrible tablet. Buy it only if you want to replace paper, not your iPad.
Overview
The BOOX Note Air 5 C is a niche device that knows exactly what it is, and you need to know that too before you buy. It's not a tablet. It's a digital notebook with a color E Ink screen, and it's built for people who want to read, write, and annotate without the distractions or eye strain of a regular tablet. The one thing to know? This thing is purpose-built. If you're trying to watch YouTube or scroll social media, you'll hate it. But if you want to replace a stack of legal pads and PDFs, it's in a league of its own.
Performance
Looking at our database, the performance scores are exactly what you'd expect for an E Ink device and confirm its niche status. It ranks in the 41st percentile for CPU and 43rd for GPU, which is basically a polite way of saying it's not built for speed. What surprised us was how low the 'entertainment' score is at 18.4 out of 100. That's not a bug, it's a feature. This tablet actively discourages you from using it for anything other than its intended job, and once you accept that, the slower refresh rate and grayscale-heavy color palette stop being problems and start being benefits.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- The E Ink screen is fantastic for long reading and writing sessions with zero eye strain.
- The note-taking feel with the stylus is top-tier, mimicking paper better than any LCD tablet.
- Battery life lasts for weeks, not hours, because the screen only uses power when it changes.
- It runs Android, so you can sideload reading or note-taking apps you already use.
Cons
- The color screen is dark, gray, and washed-out compared to any LCD—it's a fundamental tech limitation. 21th
- The interface is clunky and not intuitive if you're used to slick iPadOS or Android. 27th
- For $530, you're paying a premium for a very specialized tool with mid-tier specs. 28th
- Forget about video, gaming, or even smooth web browsing. It's physically incapable. 31th
The Word on the Street
Specifications
Full Specifications
Memory & Storage
| Storage | 64 GB |
Display
| Size | 10.3" |
Connectivity
| Cellular | No |
Physical
| Weight | 0.4 kg / 0.9 lbs |
Value & Pricing
At $530, the value question is simple but brutal. Compared to a base iPad, it's a terrible value. You get worse performance, a worse screen for media, and a clunkier OS for the same money. But that's the wrong comparison. As a dedicated digital notebook and reader, nothing else at this price does what it does as well. You're paying for the E Ink screen and the writing experience, period. If that's your core need, it's worth it. If you have any other needs, it's not.
vs Competition
This sits in a weird spot. The Apple iPad (any model) and Samsung Galaxy Tab are its direct price competitors, but they're completely different devices for different jobs. A better comparison is against other E Ink tablets like the reMarkable 2. The reMarkable is more focused and has a better writing feel out of the box, but it's black-and-white only and has a closed ecosystem. The BOOX wins if you need color for diagrams or charts, or if you absolutely must run Kindle or Libby apps directly on the device. Against the Kindle Scribe, the BOOX offers color and full Android, but the Scribe has deeper Amazon integration and is often cheaper.
| Spec | BOOX BOOX Tablet 10.3" Note Air 5 C 6G 64G E Ink Tablet | Apple iPad Pro Apple 11" iPad Pro M5 Chip (Standard Glass, 512GB, | Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft 13" Surface Pro Copilot+ PC (11th | 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 | - | 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) | - | 12 | 32 | 12 | 16 | 32 |
| Storage (GB) | 64 | 512 | 1000 | 256 | 256 | 2048 |
| Screen | 10.3" | 11" 2420x1668 | 13" 2880x1920 | 12.4" 2800x1752 | 12.7" 2944x1840 | 10.1" 1920x1200 |
| OS | - | 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 |
Common Questions
Q: Can I watch Netflix or browse the web on this?
Technically, yes. Practically, no. The slow refresh rate makes video unwatchable and scrolling a frustrating, ghost-filled mess. It's not designed for that.
Q: Is the color screen good?
Good for E Ink? Yes, it's the best available. Good compared to a normal tablet? Not even close. It's pale, dark, and best for highlighting text or viewing charts, not photos.
Q: How's the battery life really?
It's incredible if you use it as intended. With Wi-Fi off and just reading/writing, you can go weeks. Try to use apps constantly, and it'll drop faster, but still beats any iPad.
Who Should Skip This
If you're looking for a general-purpose tablet to watch videos, play games, or browse the web, this isn't it. Go get a base model iPad instead. You'll be happier and save money. Also, skip this if you get frustrated easily with tech—the software has a learning curve.
Verdict
We can recommend the BOOX Note Air 5 C, but only to a very specific person. If you are a student, researcher, or professional who spends hours every day reading PDFs, taking handwritten notes, and annotating documents, and you want a single device to replace paper without the eye fatigue of a backlit screen, this is your best option. For literally anyone else—casual readers, media consumers, general tablet users—this is a confusing, expensive, and disappointing purchase. Buy the right tool for the job.