HP HP OmniBook X 14.0" Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite Review

The HP OmniBook X offers MacBook-beating battery life for under $900, but you'll trade away app compatibility and gaming power. We'll tell you if it's worth the gamble.

CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100
RAM 160 GB
Storage 512 GB
Screen 14" 2240x1400
GPU Qualcomm X1
OS Windows 11 Home
Weight 1.3 kg
Battery 59 Wh
HP HP OmniBook X 14.0" Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite laptop
68.2 Punteggio Complessivo

The 30-Second Version

The HP OmniBook X is a battery life champion with a compatibility asterisk. It's a fantastic budget MacBook Air alternative, as long as you never need to run an old .exe file.

Overview

The HP OmniBook X is a fascinating experiment that mostly works. It's a Windows laptop built on a phone chip, and the headline is simple: you get MacBook-level battery life and instant-on responsiveness for less than $900. That's the one thing to know. This isn't your dad's HP laptop. It's a sleek, fanless machine powered by the new Snapdragon X Elite, and it feels like a direct shot across Apple's bow. For everyday browsing, office work, and media, it's shockingly fast and lasts forever. But you have to be okay with living in the 'mostly compatible' lane of the Windows app world.

Performance

The performance story is a tale of two chips. The CPU is a monster. In our database, it's in the 98th percentile, meaning it's one of the fastest laptop processors you can buy right now for general tasks. Apps open instantly, and the whole system feels incredibly snappy. The surprise is the GPU, which lands in a disappointing 36th percentile. It's fine for video playback and basic graphics, but it's the reason this thing scores a dismal 16.6 for gaming. Don't even think about running anything modern. The 16GB of RAM is top-tier, but the 512GB SSD is just average for the price.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 98.3
GPU 38.8
RAM 99.6
Ports 38.4
Screen 73.3
Portability 82.8
Storage 56
Reliability 28.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong ram (100th percentile) 100th
  • Strong cpu (98th percentile) 98th
  • Strong compact (83th percentile) 83th
  • Strong screen (73th percentile) 73th

Cons

  • Below average reliability (29th percentile) 29th

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100
Cores 12
Frequency 3.4 GHz
L3 Cache 6 MB

Graphics

GPU X1
Type integrated
VRAM Type Shared

Memory & Storage

RAM 160 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type NVMe SSD

Display

Size 14"
Resolution 2240
Panel IPS
Brightness 300 nits
Color Gamut 100% sRGB

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 6E
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.3

Physical

Weight 1.3 kg / 3.0 lbs
Battery 59 Wh
OS Windows 11 Home

Value & Pricing

At $899, the value is hard to argue with if your needs align perfectly. You're getting near-MacBook Air performance and battery life for several hundred dollars less. But that 'if' is doing a lot of work. You're trading away guaranteed app compatibility and any semblance of graphics power. For the right person, it's a steal. For the wrong person, it's a paperweight.

899 CA$

vs Competition

This laptop has two clear competitors. The Apple MacBook Air M3 is the obvious one. It offers a similar fanless, long-battery-life experience but with flawless app compatibility, a better screen, and stronger build quality for a few hundred dollars more. The other is the Microsoft Surface Laptop Copilot+ PC. It runs the same Snapdragon X chip, so performance and battery are similar, but you pay a premium for the Surface design and brand. The HP undercuts it on price, making it the budget pick in the new ARM Windows world.

Spec HP HP OmniBook X 14.0" Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite ASUS ROG Flow ASUS ROG Flow - AMD Ryzen AI MAX+ 395 AMD Radeon Apple MacBook Pro Apple 14" MacBook Pro (M5, Silver) Lenovo ThinkPad Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 7 16" UHD+ OLED Touchscreen MSI Creator MSI Creator M14 A13V A13VF-081US 14" 2.8K Laptop, HP ZBook HP 14" ZBook Ultra G1a Multi-Touch Mobile
CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 Apple M5 Intel Core Ultra 7 165H Intel Core i7 13620H AMD Ryzen AI Max+ Pro 395
RAM (GB) 160 128 32 64 32 128
Storage (GB) 512 1024 4096 2048 2048 2048
Screen 14" 2240x1400 13.4" 2560x1600 14.2" 3024x1964 16" 3840x2160 14" 2880x1800 14" 2880x1800
GPU Qualcomm X1 AMD Radeon 8060 Apple (10-Core) NVIDIA RTX 2000 Ada Generation NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 AMD Radeon
OS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Pro macOS Windows 11 Pro, English Windows 11 Home (MSI recommends Windows 11 Pro for business) Windows 11 Pro
Weight (kg) 1.3 1.2 1.5 1.8 1.6 2.5
Battery (Wh) 59 70 72 90 - 74
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare

Common Questions

Q: Can it run all my Windows programs?

Not all of them. Most modern apps work great, especially from the Microsoft Store. But older x86 software or niche utilities might need an emulator, which can slow things down or just not work. Check your essential apps first.

Q: Is the 512GB storage enough?

It's fine for most people. It's a middle-of-the-pack SSD, so speeds are good. But if you have a huge photo/video library or install big games (which you shouldn't on this anyway), you'll want to budget for cloud storage or an external drive.

Q: How's the battery life really?

It's the main selling point. Expect 15+ hours of light use like web browsing and video. That's MacBook territory, and it destroys most Intel/AMD Windows laptops. The efficient ARM chip is the reason this thing exists.

Who Should Skip This

If you're a gamer, a video editor, or a software developer who needs to run x64 virtual machines, this isn't it. The GPU is weak, and app compatibility is a minefield. Go get a Lenovo Legion or a Framework laptop with an AMD Ryzen chip instead. You'll get less battery life, but everything will just work.

Verdict

We recommend the HP OmniBook X, but with a giant asterisk. Buy this if you live in a web browser, Microsoft Office, and streaming apps, and you desperately want all-day battery life on a budget. It excels at being a modern, portable productivity machine. For anyone else—gamers, creative pros, people who rely on niche Windows software—this is an easy skip. The compatibility headaches and weak GPU are dealbreakers.