Microsoft Surface Pro 10 Microsoft Surface Pro 10 for Business, 2-n-1 Review

The Surface Pro 10 for Business is a capable but overpriced Windows tablet. We found its Intel processor underwhelming for the cost, making it a tough recommendation when better options exist.

CPU Intel
RAM 32 GB
Storage 32 GB
Screen 13" 2880x1920
OS Windows 11 Pro
Stylus Yes
Cellular No
Microsoft Surface Pro 10 Microsoft Surface Pro 10 for Business, 2-n-1 tablet
50 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

The Surface Pro 10 for Business is overpriced and underpowered. You're paying for the logo and a legacy Intel chip when better options exist.

Overview

The Microsoft Surface Pro 10 for Business is a confusing proposition. It's a premium-priced business tablet that feels like it's trying to be everything to everyone, but ends up being a jack-of-all-trades, master of none. The one thing you need to know? It's a solid, serviceable Windows machine in a tablet body, but you're paying a hefty premium for the Surface name and a design that hasn't fundamentally changed in years.

Performance

Looking at our database, the performance story is a mixed bag. The Intel Core Ultra 7 processor lands in the 44th percentile for CPU performance, which is frankly underwhelming for a device at this price point. It's fine for Office apps and web browsing, but don't expect it to blaze through heavy workloads. The real surprise is the GPU, which scores in the 78th percentile—decent for some light creative work or casual gaming. But that 32GB of RAM (95th percentile) feels like overkill when paired with such a middling CPU and a storage score in the dismal 11th percentile.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 44.3
GPU 78
RAM 94.8
Screen 88.2
Battery 48.8
Feature 93.2
Storage 10.6
Connectivity 74.7
Social Proof 9.5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong ram (95th percentile) 95th
  • Strong feature (93th percentile) 93th
  • Strong screen (88th percentile) 88th
  • Strong gpu (78th percentile) 78th

Cons

  • Below average social proof (10th percentile) 10th
  • Below average storage (11th percentile) 11th

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel
GPU Intel Graphics

Memory & Storage

RAM 32 GB
Storage 32 GB

Display

Size 13"
Resolution 2880

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 6

Features

Stylus Support Yes

Physical

Weight 0.9 kg / 1.9 lbs
OS Windows 11 Pro

Value & Pricing

Worth it? Not for most people. At this price, you're buying into the Surface ecosystem and business-grade serviceability. For the same money, you could get a more powerful traditional laptop or a much faster tablet. The value just isn't there unless your IT department mandates Surfaces.

$130 Unavailable

vs Competition

Compared to the 13-inch iPad Pro, the Surface wins on being a full PC but loses badly on raw performance, battery life, and app optimization for the tablet form factor. The iPad's M-series chip runs circles around this Intel processor. Against something like the new Copilot+ Surface Pro with the Snapdragon X Elite, this Intel model feels immediately outdated. Even compared to a Samsung Galaxy Tab S10+, you get a better media consumption device for less money. This Surface Pro 10 is stuck between two worlds.

Common Questions

Q: Is the battery life really 19 hours?

Almost certainly not in real-world use. That's a manufacturer estimate under ideal conditions. Our data puts its battery performance in the 49th percentile, which translates to a workday of typical use, not a marathon.

Q: Can I use this for graphic design or photo editing?

You can, but it's not the best tool for it. The screen is great, but the middling CPU percentile (44th) means rendering or filtering large files will be slower than on a dedicated laptop with a stronger chip. It's fine for light Photoshop work, not for professional 4K video editing.

Q: Should I get this or an iPad Pro?

If you need full Windows desktop programs for work, get the Surface. For literally everything else—speed, battery life, tablet apps, media consumption, and stylus feel—the iPad Pro is the better device. It's not even close on pure performance.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for the best tablet experience, this isn't it. Go get an iPad Pro. If you're looking for the most powerful Windows machine for your money, this also isn't it. Go get a framework laptop or a Dell XPS. Only get this if you're specifically required to have a serviceable, business-grade Windows tablet.

Verdict

We can't recommend the Surface Pro 10 for Business for most buyers. It's a competent device hamstrung by its price and an aging Intel platform. If you need a Windows tablet and your company is paying for it, sure, it'll get the job done. But for anyone spending their own money, there are better, faster, and more value-packed options in both the tablet and laptop categories. Wait for a sale, or better yet, look at the newer ARM-based models.