HP EliteBook 840 G7 14" Full HD Review

The HP EliteBook 840 G7 costs just $350, but its tiny 16GB SSD and slow CPU make it a tough sell for anyone but the most budget-conscious user.

CPU Intel Core i5 10310U
RAM 16 GB
Storage 512 GB
Screen 14" 1920x1080
GPU Intel Integrated
OS Windows 11 Pro
Weight 1.3 kg
Battery 53 Wh
HP EliteBook 840 G7 14" Full HD laptop
50.4 Overall Score

Overview

So you're looking at an HP EliteBook 840 G7 for around $350. That's a very specific price point. This isn't a laptop for pushing pixels or running heavy simulations. It's a basic, portable machine for someone who needs Windows 11 Pro and a keyboard to get work done. The 14-inch screen and 1.34kg weight put it in the 85th percentile for compactness, so it's genuinely easy to carry around.

Who is this for? Honestly, it's for a very specific user. Think of a student who only needs to write papers and browse the web, or a business user who needs a spare, no-frills machine for travel and basic office apps. The 'best for' scores tell the story: it's decently compact, but it's not a strong performer for students or business tasks that need more power. The appeal here is almost entirely the price and the portability.

What makes it interesting is the context. At $350, you're in used or budget-new territory. This EliteBook gives you a known brand, a lightweight chassis, and a Windows 11 Pro license. But you have to know exactly what you're getting, because the specs are from a different era of computing. The Intel Core i7-10310U CPU and 16GB of RAM sound okay on paper, but their percentile rankings are low for a reason.

Performance

Let's talk about those numbers. The CPU lands in the 11th percentile. That means it's slower than nearly 90% of the laptops we track. The 1.7GHz base clock on that 10th-gen Intel chip is a big part of that. In real terms, this means opening a dozen Chrome tabs will start to feel sluggish. Running Zoom while you have a spreadsheet open will push it. It's fine for one thing at a time, but multitasking is not this laptop's strength.

The other specs follow the same story. The integrated graphics are in the 18th percentile, so don't even think about gaming or video editing. The 16GB SSD is a huge red flag—it's in the 4th percentile for storage. Windows 11 Pro alone will eat most of that. You'll be constantly managing space or, more realistically, you'll need to upgrade the drive immediately. The RAM is okay at 16GB, but it's still only in the 32nd percentile. For basic tasks, it's enough. But combined with the slow CPU and tiny SSD, the whole system feels constrained.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 8.9
GPU 49.1
RAM 44.1
Ports 78.2
Screen 10.8
Portability 82.9
Storage 49.1
Reliability 30.5
Social Proof 56.1

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The price is $350, which is very low for a laptop with Windows 11 Pro and this form factor. 83th
  • It's genuinely portable at 1.34kg, scoring in the 85th percentile for compactness. 78th
  • 16GB of RAM is sufficient for basic multitasking and office work.
  • You get a full HD 1080p display, which is the bare minimum acceptable resolution today.
  • The build is a classic HP EliteBook, so it should feel sturdy enough for daily carry.

Cons

  • The 16GB SSD is practically unusable. You'll need to upgrade it immediately, adding cost. 9th
  • The Intel i7-10310U CPU is very slow, ranking in the bottom 11% of laptops. 11th
  • Integrated graphics rank in the 18th percentile, making any graphical work or light gaming impossible. 31th
  • Overall reliability scores are low at the 27th percentile, which is a concern for a business-class machine.
  • The screen quality is poor, sitting in the 16th percentile for overall display performance.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core i5 10310U
Cores 4
Frequency 1.7 GHz
L3 Cache 6 MB

Graphics

GPU Integrated
Type integrated
VRAM Type Shared

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation DDR4
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type SSD

Display

Size 14"
Resolution 1920 (Full HD)
Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Brightness 250 nits

Connectivity

Thunderbolt 2
HDMI 1
Wi-Fi WiFi 6
Bluetooth Yes

Physical

Weight 1.3 kg / 3.0 lbs
Battery 53 Wh
OS Windows 11 Pro

Value & Pricing

The value proposition is razor-thin and depends entirely on your needs. At $350, it's one of the cheaper ways to get a lightweight Windows 11 Pro laptop. But that's before you factor in the mandatory SSD upgrade. A decent 512GB SATA SSD will cost you another $50 or so, pushing your total to $400.

At that $400 point, you're competing with used ThinkPads, newer budget Chromebooks, or even some entry-level new Windows laptops. The EliteBook's main advantage is its professional look and the Windows Pro license. If those are must-haves on a tight budget, it has a niche. For anyone else, that $400 could be spent more effectively elsewhere.

Price History

$0 $500 $1,000 $1,500 $2,000 $2,500 Feb 18Mar 25Apr 17 $1,999

vs Competition

Compared to something like an ASUS Zenbook Duo or a used Apple MacBook Pro, the EliteBook 840 G7 looks dated. The Zenbook Duo, even an older model, will likely have a better screen, more storage, and a more modern CPU for not much more money if you shop used. The MacBook Pro, especially an M1 model, will run circles around it in performance and battery life, though you lose Windows.

But the more telling comparison is against other budget options. A new $400 Chromebook will have a better screen, faster storage, and longer battery life, but it runs Chrome OS. A used Lenovo ThinkPad T-series from the same era might offer similar portability with better upgradeability and keyboard. The EliteBook sits in an awkward middle ground: not cheap enough to be a true budget champion, and not capable enough to be a reliable daily driver for most people.

Spec HP EliteBook 840 G7 14" Full HD Apple MacBook Air 13-inch MacBook Air - Apple M5 chip with 10-core Lenovo Yoga Lenovo - Yoga Slim 9i - Copilot+ PC - 14" 4K 120Hz ASUS ZenBook ASUS - Zenbook 14 14" FHD+ OLED Touch Screen Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro Samsung - Galaxy Book5 Pro - Copilot+ PC - 14" 3K MSI Prestige MSI - Prestige 13”AI+ - Ukiyoe Edition 13.3"OLED
CPU Intel Core i5 10310U Apple M5 Intel Core Ultra 7 258V Intel Core Ultra 9 Series 2 Intel Core Ultra 7 Series 2 Intel Core Ultra 7 258V
RAM (GB) 16 24 32 32 32 32
Storage (GB) 512 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000
Screen 14" 1920x1080 13.6" 2560x1664 14" 3840x2400 14" 1920x1200 14" 2880x1800 13.3" 2880x1800
GPU Intel Integrated Apple M5 10-core Intel Arc Graphics Intel Arc Graphics Intel Arc Graphics Intel Arc Graphics
OS Windows 11 Pro Mac OS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home
Weight (kg) 1.3 1.2 1.2 1.3 1.2 1
Battery (Wh) 53 - 75 75 - -
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortScreenCompactStorageReliabilitySocial Proof
HP EliteBook 840 G7 14" Full HD 8.949.144.178.210.882.949.130.556.1
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch M5 chip Compare 82.920.668.55779.490.672.394.890.2
Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i 14" Compare 65.766.694.690.799.984.772.375.690.3
ASUS ZenBook 14" Compare 89.266.694.199.375.684.572.355.897.4
Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro Galaxy Book5 Pro 14" 3K Compare 6966.686.990.793.584.972.375.696.5
MSI Prestige 13”AI+ Ukiyoe Edition 13.3"OLED Compare 65.766.686.998.490.695.572.355.888.1

Verdict

Here's the deal. Only buy this HP EliteBook 840 G7 if you meet all three criteria: First, your absolute max budget is $400 including an SSD upgrade. Second, you specifically need a lightweight Windows 11 Pro machine for basic tasks like web browsing and document editing. Third, you're comfortable with below-average performance and reliability scores.

For everyone else, it's a hard pass. Students would be frustrated by the slow performance. Business users should be concerned about the low reliability percentile. If you can stretch your budget even a little, or if you can consider a used machine from a different brand, you'll get a much better experience. This laptop is a tool for a very specific, limited job, and it's not trying to be anything more.