November 4, 2025
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OmniBook 5 Flip
14 Inches | 512 GB | 8 GB | Core 5-120U
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14 Inches | 16 GB | 512 GB | Snapdragon X Plus
Best Price Ever
14 Inches | 16 GB | 512 GB | Ryzen AI 5 340
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14 Inches | 512 GB | 8 GB | Core 5-120U
The OmniBook 5 Flip looks simple but feels well made. Its rounded edges are comfortable, and the chassis has almost no flex—better than some of HP’s pricier models. It’s a bit heavy, but that weight brings sturdiness, and the compact charger helps offset it.
You get a 14-inch 1920×1200 IPS touchscreen with 340-nit brightness. It’s fine indoors, though too dim for outdoor use. Colors are average but at least there’s no PWM flicker. The Flip model can fold into tablet mode, and pen input works smoothly with a little resistance, like writing on a piece of paper. The pen is sold separately. There is a non-Flip version that offers an OLED option with better color and contrast, also in the budget range if you'd prefer that.
14 Inches | 16 GB | 512 GB | Snapdragon X Plus
Typing feels great for a budget device—quiet, comfortable, and with large arrow keys. There’s a bright backlight too. The trackpad is accurate, though its click is loud and stiff. Enabling tap-to-click helps if you’re in quiet spaces.
Connectivity is generous: two USB-A ports, two USB-C (one for charging), HDMI 2.1, and a headphone jack. The only downside is noticeable warmth near the charging port on the left side. No Thunderbolt support, but that’s expected at this price.
Our model’s Intel Core 5-120U and 8GB of non-upgradeable RAM are fine for Office apps, browsing, and streaming. Anything heavier will feel sluggish. Gaming is limited to older titles like League of Legends on medium settings. Battery life is average—around 6–7 hours. The Qualcomm/clamshell version of this laptop reportedly lasts longer.
The fans spin up even during light use, and charging adds warmth on the left side. It’s not silent, but still manageable. The bottom-firing speakers are surprisingly loud with a touch of bass, though they sound muffled on soft surfaces.
At $400, the HP OmniBook 5 Flip is easily one of the best new budget laptops around. It’s far better built than Lenovo’s IdeaPad 1 or Dell’s basic Inspiron models. Performance is limited, but for studying, browsing, or office work, it’s more than enough.
If you find a discounted Lenovo Yoga 7 or MacBook Air M2 nearby in price, those are both stronger picks—but for a new Windows 2-in-1 under $500, this is the one to beat.
14 Inches | 16 GB | 512 GB | Ryzen AI 5 340
13 Inches | 256 GB | 8 GB | M2 8-Core | M2 8-Core GPU