PRITOM PRITOM L8 Reading Tablet 8 inch, Android 13 Review

The Pritom L8 is a $53 Android tablet that makes big promises. We tested it to see if this budget device is a hidden gem or just cheap for a reason.

CPU 1.5 GHz
RAM 64 GB
Storage 32 GB
Screen 8" 1280x800
OS Android
Stylus No
Cellular No
PRITOM PRITOM L8 Reading Tablet 8 inch, Android 13 tablet
33.5 Gesamtbewertung

The 30-Second Version

It's a $53 tablet, so expectations should be on the floor. It runs Android 13 and can play videos, but it's slow, has a mediocre screen, and feels cheap. Only buy this as a dedicated device for one simple job, not as your main tablet.

Overview

The Pritom L8 is a $53 Android tablet that's trying to be everything to everyone. It's got Android 13, a quad-core processor, and 64GB of RAM, which sounds impressive on paper. But our data tells a different story. This is a budget device through and through, and it's built for one thing: cheap, basic entertainment.

Look, for fifty bucks, you get an 8-inch screen, a battery that claims up to 8 hours, and the ability to download apps from the Play Store. That's the pitch. It's a beater tablet for the kitchen, the car, or for a kid. Just don't expect it to keep up with anything modern.

Performance

Performance is exactly what you'd expect for the price, which is to say, not great. The unspecified quad-core CPU lands in the 8th percentile in our database, so it's one of the slowest we've tested. Apps launch, but they stutter. Videos play, but don't expect buttery smooth 1080p streaming. The 64GB of RAM is a weird flex—it's in the 98th percentile, but that's meaningless when paired with such a weak processor and only 32GB of actual storage (10th percentile). The 8-inch, 1280x800 IPS screen is fine for reading, but at a 14th percentile ranking, colors are washed out and it's not very bright.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 7.2
GPU 99.4
RAM 98.8
Screen 9.3
Battery 49.1
Feature 28.1
Storage 9.6
Connectivity 59.6
Social Proof 62.8

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • It's incredibly cheap at $53. 99th
  • Runs the latest Android 13 OS. 99th
  • Accepts microSD cards for extra storage.
  • Lightweight and easy to carry around.

Cons

  • The processor is painfully slow. 7th
  • The screen is dim and low-resolution. 9th
  • Built-in storage is only 32GB. 10th
  • Battery life is just average for the category. 28th

The Word on the Street

4.0/5 (857 reviews)
👍 Many buyers are pleasantly surprised by the value, noting it works fine for basic video watching and light games given the ultra-low price.
🤔 A common theme is that the tablet meets low expectations for the cost, but users frequently mention it feels slow or laggy during use.
👍 Several reviews highlight the loud speakers and decent sound quality as a positive standout feature for media consumption.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU 1.5 GHz
GPU Graphics

Memory & Storage

RAM 64 GB
RAM Generation DDR3
Storage 32 GB

Display

Size 8"
Resolution 1280
Panel IPS

Physical

Weight 0.6 kg / 1.4 lbs
OS Android

Value & Pricing

For fifty-three dollars, you get a functional tablet. That's the value proposition, full stop. It's not a good value in terms of performance per dollar—you're getting bottom-tier specs. But it is a value in terms of absolute cost. If your budget is "as close to zero as possible," and you need a screen to watch YouTube in the car, this does that. Just know you're paying for the absolute minimum experience.

$53

vs Competition

Stacked against the competition, the Pritom L8 exists in its own universe. An iPad Pro or Galaxy Tab S10+ will run circles around it a thousand times over, but they also cost twenty times as much. A more relevant comparison might be other super-budget Android tablets or older Amazon Fire tablets. The L8's claim to fame is Android 13 and that huge RAM number, but in real use, a Fire HD 8 on sale will feel just as snappy (or sluggish) for similar basic tasks, with a much better ecosystem for media. The Pritom wins on price alone, but loses on polish and reliability.

Spec PRITOM PRITOM L8 Reading Tablet 8 inch, Android 13 Apple iPad Pro Apple 11" iPad Pro M5 Chip (Standard Glass, 512GB, Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Samsung 12.4" Galaxy Tab S10+ 256GB Multi-Touch Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft - Surface Pro - Copilot+ PC - 13” OLED Lenovo Yoga Tab Series Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus Xenarc Xenarc 10.1" RT101-PRO 256GB Tablet (Wi-Fi, 4G
CPU 1.5 GHz Apple M5 MediaTek 9300 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 Qualcomm® Snapdragon® 8 Gen 3, QCM8650 8-Core: Up to GHz
RAM (GB) 64 12 12 32 16 8
Storage (GB) 32 512 256 1000 256 256
Screen 8" 1280x800 11" 2420x1668 12.4" 2800x1752 13" 2880x1920 12.7" 2944x1840 10.1" 1920x1200
OS Android iPadOS Android 14 Windows 11 Home Android 14 Android 13
Stylus false true true false false false
Cellular false false false false false true

Common Questions

Q: Can this tablet run Netflix and YouTube?

Yes, you can download those apps from the Google Play Store. Video playback works, but don't expect super high quality or flawless performance—it's a basic experience.

Q: Is 32GB of storage enough?

Not really for a lot of apps and media. Luckily, it has a microSD slot that supports cards up to 512GB, which is essential for storing movies, music, or books.

Q: How is the battery life for reading?

The 3900mAh battery is rated for up to 8 hours of mixed use. With the eye-comfort mode on and just reading, you might hit that, but general use will be less.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this if you need a tablet for anything resembling work, multitasking, or a good browsing experience. The CPU is in the 8th percentile, which means it's agonizingly slow for anything beyond one app at a time. If you want a nice screen for watching movies, the dim, low-res display (14th percentile) will disappoint. Basically, if it's your only computing device, look elsewhere.

Verdict

Buy this if you need a disposable screen for one simple, specific task. Think: a dedicated Spotify player for your old car, a recipe reader for the kitchen that you don't mind getting greasy, or a first tablet for a very young child where you'd cry if it broke. If your needs extend beyond that—like actually browsing the web comfortably, using multiple apps, or expecting a good screen—you should save up for literally anything else.