Dell 14" Pro Max 14 Review

The Dell Pro Max 14 has the most powerful laptop CPU ever made, but you pay for it with a mediocre screen, small storage, and a high price. It's a niche machine for a very specific user.

CPU AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 350
RAM 16 GB
Storage 512 GB
Screen 14" 1920x1200
GPU AMD Radeon 860
OS Windows 11 Pro
Weight 1.8 kg
Battery 72 Wh
Dell 14" Pro Max 14 laptop
62.8 Score global

Overview

So, you're looking at the Dell Pro Max 14. It's a bit of a weird one, honestly. On paper, it's packing a 50-core AMD CPU, which is a number you just don't see in a 14-inch laptop. That's the headline. But this isn't a gaming beast or a sleek ultrabook. It's more like a portable workstation that's trying to be a little bit of everything. It's for someone who needs serious CPU muscle on the go, maybe for coding, data analysis, or heavy multitasking, but who doesn't want a giant, heavy machine. The discrete Radeon 860 GPU and 16GB of RAM suggest it can handle more than just spreadsheets, but it's not built to be a primary gaming rig.

Performance

Let's talk about that CPU. A 50-core chip in this chassis is wild. It scores in the 100th percentile, which means it's literally the top performer you can get in a laptop right now for raw multi-core tasks. Rendering, compiling code, running VMs? This thing will chew through it. The catch is everything else. The Radeon 860 GPU lands in the 55th percentile. That's fine for light gaming and accelerating creative apps, but it's not going to blow you away. It's a solid supporting actor to the CPU's lead role. The 16GB of RAM is right in the middle of the pack at the 50th percentile, which is enough for now but might feel tight if you're pushing that CPU really hard with multiple demanding applications.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 99.8
GPU 61.1
RAM 59.4
Ports 82.7
Screen 56.8
Portability 71.3
Storage 46.9
Reliability 29.4

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Unbeatable CPU performance. That 100th percentile score means it's the king for multi-threaded workloads. 100th
  • Surprisingly portable for the power. At 1.79kg and scoring in the 73rd percentile for compactness, it's easy to carry. 83th
  • Good connectivity for a 14-inch laptop. WiFi 7 and an HDMI 2.1 port are nice future-proofing touches. 71th
  • Discrete GPU adds flexibility. The Radeon 860 gives you options beyond the integrated graphics for light creative work or gaming.
  • Windows 11 Pro is a bonus for power users who need its management and security features.

Cons

  • The screen is a weak point. A 60Hz VA panel at 35th percentile isn't great for a $1700+ machine. Expect mediocre viewing angles and motion clarity. 29th
  • Storage is stingy. 512GB at the 34th percentile feels cheap for this price bracket. You'll likely need to upgrade.
  • Reliability concerns. A 27th percentile ranking here is a red flag. Dell's support reputation for this tier might be tested.
  • Battery life is an unknown. A 72Wh battery paired with a 50-core CPU? Don't expect to be unplugged for long under load.
  • The GPU is just okay. For gaming or GPU-heavy tasks, you're getting mid-tier performance at a premium price.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 350
Cores 50
Frequency 2.0 GHz
L3 Cache 8 MB

Graphics

GPU 860
Type discrete

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type SSD

Display

Size 14"
Resolution 1920 (Full HD)
Panel VA
Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Brightness 300 nits
Color Gamut 45% NTSC

Connectivity

Thunderbolt Thunderbolt 4
HDMI 1x HDMI 2.1 Output
Wi-Fi WiFi 7
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.4

Physical

Weight 1.8 kg / 3.9 lbs
Battery 72 Wh
OS Windows 11 Pro

Value & Pricing

Here's the rub: at around $1740, this laptop is expensive for what you're getting outside of the CPU. You're paying a huge premium for that 50-core chip. The storage is small, the screen is basic, and the reliability score is low. You can find laptops with better overall specs, including nicer screens and more storage, for the same money. But if your workflow lives and dies by multi-core CPU performance, and you need it in a 14-inch form factor, there's literally nothing faster. It's a niche tool with a niche price tag.

Price History

1 720 $US 1 730 $US 1 740 $US 1 750 $US 1 760 $US 18 févr.21 mars 1 740 $US

vs Competition

Compared to an Apple MacBook Pro 14 with an M4 Max, you get a way more powerful multi-core CPU, but you lose out on everything else: battery life, screen quality, build quality, and GPU performance for creative apps. The MacBook is a better all-rounder. Next to a Lenovo Legion Pro 7i, you're giving up serious gaming and GPU power for portability. The Legion will demolish it in games and has a much better screen, but it's a 16-inch brick. The ASUS Zenbook Duo offers wild dual-screen productivity in a similar portable size, but with a much less powerful CPU. It comes down to this: the Dell Pro Max 14 is a one-trick pony. Its trick is being the fastest multi-core machine in a small package, but you compromise on almost every other feature to get it.

Verdict

If you're a developer, data scientist, or engineer who runs massively parallelized workloads and you need to carry your machine to meetings or a coffee shop, this laptop makes a strange kind of sense. It's a specialist tool. For everyone else, it's a hard sell. Gamers should look at the Legion or MSI Vector. Creative pros are better served by the MacBook Pro or a machine with a better screen. General users will find the screen and storage frustrating for the price. Only buy this if that CPU score is the single most important number on your spec sheet.