BOOX BOOX 10.3" Note Air5 C Tablet Review

The BOOX Note Air5 C has a brilliant color E-Ink screen perfect for readers, but its low 29.6/100 productivity score means it's not a laptop replacement.

CPU Qualcomm
RAM 6 GB
Storage 64 GB
Screen 10.3" 2480x1860
OS Android 15
Stylus No
Cellular No
BOOX BOOX 10.3" Note Air5 C Tablet tablet
38.2 Overall Score

Overview

The BOOX Note Air5 C is a tablet that knows exactly what it is. With a 10.3" color E-Ink screen and a 74th percentile ranking for display quality, it's built for one thing: reading. Its overall score of 37.4/100 tells you it's not trying to be an all-rounder. It's a specialist, and it's comfortable with that. You get 6GB of RAM, 64GB of storage (expandable, thankfully), and Android 15 on a Qualcomm chip. At 439g, it's light enough to hold for hours. But those core specs land in the 34th to 52nd percentiles, which means you're buying the screen, not raw power.

Performance

Performance is a mixed bag, and that's by design. The octa-core CPU and 6GB of RAM land in the 34th and 52nd percentiles respectively. That's fine for flipping pages in an e-book app or browsing simple websites, but it's not built for heavy lifting. The GPU sits even lower at the 36th percentile, so don't expect to game on this. The real star is the screen. That 10.3" Kaleido 3 color E-Ink display hits 2480x1860 resolution in black and white mode and sits in the 74th percentile. For reading, it's excellent. For anything else, it's a compromise. The battery life is perfectly average at the 50th percentile, which should get you through a day of reading.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 44.2
GPU 45.9
RAM 67.9
Screen 80.5
Battery 48.5
Feature 66.6
Storage 31.4
Connectivity 76.3
Social Proof 12.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The 10.3" color E-Ink screen is in the 74th percentile for display quality, making it fantastic for reading. 81th
  • At 439g, it's significantly lighter than most full-size tablets, perfect for long reading sessions. 76th
  • Runs Android 15, so you can install your favorite reading apps from the Google Play Store. 68th
  • Includes expandable storage, a crucial feature since the base 64GB is only in the 23rd percentile. 67th
  • Bluetooth 5.1 and overall connectivity (62nd percentile) are solid for connecting headphones or a keyboard.

Cons

  • Productivity is its weakest area, scoring just 29.6/100. This isn't a laptop replacement. 13th
  • The Qualcomm CPU performance is only in the 34th percentile, so apps can feel sluggish. 31th
  • Base storage of 64GB is low (23rd percentile), though you can expand it.
  • The GPU ranks in the 36th percentile, making it a poor choice for video or gaming.
  • The overall score of 37.4/100 reflects its limitations outside of its core reading function.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Qualcomm

Memory & Storage

RAM 6 GB
Storage 64 GB
Expandable Yes

Display

Size 10.3"
Resolution 2480
Panel LCD

Connectivity

Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.1
Cellular No

Features

Fingerprint Reader Yes

Physical

Weight 0.4 kg / 1.0 lbs
OS Android 15

Value & Pricing

At around $530, the value proposition is very clear. You're paying for that high-quality E-Ink screen in a lightweight body. Compared to a basic Kindle Scribe or a Kobo Elipsa, you're getting color and full Android. But you're not getting the performance of a similarly priced iPad or Android tablet. It's a premium tool for a specific job. If that job is reading and note-taking, the price makes sense. If you want to do anything else, your money goes further elsewhere.

$530 Unavailable

vs Competition

Let's compare it to some obvious alternatives. The base iPad is cheaper and blows it away in CPU (likely 90th+ percentile) and entertainment, but the LCD screen is harder on the eyes for long reads. The reMarkable 2 offers a better writing feel but no color and a more locked-down OS. The BOOX sits in the middle: more open than a reMarkable, easier on the eyes than an iPad, but less powerful than both for general use. Against the Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra, there's no contest on performance—the Samsung wins—but for dedicated reading, the BOOX's E-Ink screen is the clear winner for comfort.

Spec BOOX BOOX 10.3" Note Air5 C Tablet Apple iPad Pro Apple - 11-inch iPad Pro M5 chip Wi-Fi 256GB with Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra Samsung - Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra - 14.6" 1TB - Wi-Fi Microsoft Surface Pro 11 Microsoft Surface Pro 11 Copilot+ PC Tablet - 13" Lenovo Yoga Tab Series Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus HP GPD Win MAX 2 2025 Handheld Gaming PC with AMD
CPU Qualcomm Apple M5 Mediatek MT6989 Intel Core Ultra 7 266V Qualcomm® Snapdragon® 8 Gen 3, QCM8650 AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370
RAM (GB) 6 12 16 16 16 32
Storage (GB) 64 256 1024 1024 256 2048
Screen 10.3" 2480x1860 11" 2420x1668 14.6" 2960x1848 13" 2880x1920 12.7" 2944x1840 10.1" 1920x1200
OS Android 15 iPadOS Android 14 Windows 11 Pro Android 14 Windows 11 Home
Stylus false true true true false false
Cellular false false false false false false

Verdict

Here's the deal: the BOOX Note Air5 C is a fantastic e-reader that can do some light Android tablet things. If your primary use is reading books, PDFs, or articles, and you want color for comics or magazines, it's a great choice. The screen is top-tier. But if you score below 30/100 for productivity, you can't expect it to handle real work. Don't buy this as your only tablet. Buy it as a superior, dedicated reading device to complement your real computer or powerful tablet. For that specific user, it's a solid yes.