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Microsoft Lp7 13.8" Lp7 Platinum

Featherlight at just 127 grams, its 13.8-inch display with a likely Core Ultra 7 chip and 32GB of RAM delivers tablet portability without sacrificing memory headroom. The platinum finish and compact design give it a premium, tactile tablet feel that fits easily into everyday carry. It suits students and casual entertainment users needing a lightweight, touch-first device for media consumption and note-taking, not productivity workloads.

RAM 32 GB
Storage 512 GB
Screen 13.8"
stylus false
cellular false
Microsoft Lp7 13.8" Lp7 Platinum tablet
33 Overall Score
Also available in:

About This Tablet

  • 13.8"
  • 32GB Memory

The 30-Second Version

The Microsoft Lp7 is a baffling mix of top-tier RAM and storage with a weak screen, poor battery, and limited ports. It scores poorly across the board in our benchmarks, landing at just 32.1 overall. Unless you absolutely need a 127-gram tablet with 32GB of RAM and don't care about much else, skip it.

Overview

The Microsoft Lp7 is a weird tablet. It crams 32GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD into a featherlight 127-gram body, specs that embarrass most laptops, but then pairs them with a totally average processor and a screen that doesn't keep up. It's like putting a V8 engine in a golf cart and forgetting to upgrade the tires. For light browsing or streaming it's fine, but the minute you try to get real work done, the cracks show fast.

Performance

In our benchmarks, the extra memory and storage push it into the 97th and 93rd percentile respectively, so multitasking and file access feel snappier than your typical tablet. But the CPU and GPU sit down around the 37th and 39th percentiles, which means heavier apps, games, or any kind of creative work grind to a halt. It lands a middling 30.7 for student use and a truly painful 22.4 for productivity, so if you need to edit documents, crunch spreadsheets, or run more than a handful of browser tabs, this thing will frustrate you fast.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 37
GPU 38.8
RAM 97.4
Screen 27.1
Battery 30.8
Feature 5.9
Storage 93.2
Connectivity 6.6
Social Proof 27.4

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Ridiculously light at just 127g, you'll barely feel it in a bag. 97th
  • 32GB RAM and 512GB storage are overkill in the best way for a tablet. 93th
  • Build has a premium feel that matches the Microsoft name.
  • Fans don't exist, so silent operation under light loads.

Cons

  • The screen quality lands in the 27th percentile, colors look washed out. 6th
  • Port selection is barebones enough to be in the bottom 6% of all tablets. 7th
  • Battery life is a weak 31st percentile, you'll be hunting a charger by lunch. 27th
  • Performance crumbles under any real multitasking or productivity workload. 27th

The Word on the Street

4.5/5 (20 reviews)
👍 A lot of owners are surprised by how fast it feels just launching apps and switching between them thanks to the 32GB of RAM.
👎 A common gripe is the screen not getting bright enough and looking dull compared to other premium tablets.
🤔 Several buyers mention the build quality is nice, but the lack of ports forces them to carry dongles everywhere.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Memory & Storage

RAM 32 GB
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type SSD

Display

Size 13.8"

Physical

Weight 0.1 kg / 0.3 lbs

Value & Pricing

Nobody pays list price, but the vendor spread here is wild: it's listed everywhere from around $2,080 all the way up to a laughable $879,182. Even at the low end, you're spending a lot for a tablet that can't really pull its weight beyond streaming and light note-taking. If you see it for under two grand, it's a decent conversation starter, but anything more is a hard pass given the competition undercuts it with better all-around scores.

Price History

$2,060 $2,080 $2,100 $2,120 $2,140 $2,160 $2,180 May 16May 28 $2,080

vs Competition

Stacked against an Apple iPad Pro M5 or the Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra, the Lp7 gets left in the dust. Both of those offer vastly superior screens, better connectivity, and chipsets that actually let you create content, not just consume it. The HOTWAV R9 Ultra 5G, while a different beast entirely, at least has ruggedness and battery life on its side. Even the more mid-range Lenovo Legion Tab Gen 3 or Xiaomi Redmi Pad 2 give you a more balanced experience without the weird spec imbalance. The only card the Lp7 has to play is that bonkers RAM and storage combo, but that's not enough to save it.

Spec Microsoft Lp7 13.8" Lp7 Apple iPad Pro M5 Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra SM-X930NZAAXAR HOTWAV R9 Ultra 5G R9 Ultra 5G Lenovo Legion Tab Gen 3 UMIDIGI Active T1 Active T1
CPU - Apple M5 MediaTek Dimensity 9400+ 2.3 GHz Intel Core Ultra 7 165H 2000 MHz
RAM (GB) 32 16 12 24 12 16
Storage (GB) 512 1000 256 512 256 128
Screen 13.8" 13" 2752x2064 14.6" 2960x1848 11" 8.8" 2560x1600 11"
OS - Apple iPadOS Android 16 Android 15 Android 14 Android
Stylus false true true true false true
Cellular false true false true false true
Battery (Wh) - 39 - - - -
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamScreenBatteryFeatureStorageConnectivitySocial Proof
Microsoft Lp7 13.8" Lp7 3738.897.427.130.85.993.26.627.4
Apple iPad Pro M5 Compare 96.495.388.499.998.496.897.598.497.9
Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra SM-X930NZAAXAR Compare 97.496.481.495.993.286.673.963.797.9
HOTWAV R9 Ultra 5G R9 Ultra 5G Compare 94.593.795.943.130.893.689.872.648.8
Lenovo Legion Tab Gen 3 Compare 94.793.98583.867.725.883.87944.7
UMIDIGI Active T1 Active T1 Compare 83.382.288.427.187.977.652.788.765.6

Common Questions

Q: How much memory does this tablet have and is it enough?

It packs 32GB of RAM, which is overkill for most tablet tasks and in the 97th percentile for its class. It's more than enough for heavy multitasking, but the middling CPU will bottleneck things before you run out of RAM.

Q: Can the Lp7 replace my laptop for work?

Probably not. Its productivity score is a low 22.4 out of 100, and with poor connectivity and a mediocre screen, it'll struggle with anything beyond basic email and web browsing. You'd be better off with a Surface Pro or an iPad Pro if you need to get real work done.

Who Should Skip This

If you need a tablet for anything more than light reading, Netflix, or a digital notepad, look elsewhere. The weak battery and awful connectivity make it a non-starter for travel or desktop replacement, and the screen will annoy anyone who values display quality.

Verdict

Buy this if you want the lightest possible Windows tablet for very basic tasks and have a strict gram-counting obsession. Everyone else should run the other way.

Usage Scores

Overall (32.6)Reading (27.7)Student (31)Business (25.7)Art Design (25.9)Productivity (22.7)Entertainment (35.3)

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