June 6, 2025
|OmniBook X and 7 Flip: Maximum Value
Here's how these 2-in-1 laptops stack up—and which configurations are actually worth it.
14 Inches | 16 GB | 512 GB | Ryzen AI 5 340
Best Price Ever
Great Deal
14 Inches | 16 GB | 1 TB | Core Ultra 5 226V
Good Deal
16 GB | 16 Inches | 512 GB | Core Ultra 5 226V
On Sale
Great Deal
14 Inches | 16 GB | 512 GB | Core Ultra 7 255H
Good Deal
HP's new OmniBook X and 7 Flip series replace the older Pavilion and Envy lines with a cleaner design, modern displays, and better-than-expected performance for the price. But not all versions are equal, and pricing tricks make it easy to overpay.
14 Inches | 16 GB | 1 TB | Core Ultra 5 226V
We tested three models:
All three are 2-in-1 convertibles, built for light workloads like browsing, office work, and student use.
All models come with one of two display options:
The difference in quality is significant. The IPS panels are fine for casual use, but on the 16-inch model, the lower resolution looks soft and less crisp—especially for productivity tasks like spreadsheets or document work.
OLED, on the other hand, is vibrant, more color-accurate, and generally far better—even if it shows a bit of a screen-door effect up close. Both displays hit over 400 nits of brightness, and none showed PWM flickering, which is a nice surprise in this price range.
These laptops are built for light tasks, and each configuration offers good enough speed for typical users. That said, there are some differences worth noting:
Light gaming? Stick with the Core Ultra 7 for the best integrated graphics performance. AMD’s iGPU doesn’t compete here.
Thermals are a mixed bag. The OmniBook 7 Flip 16 with Intel's Core Ultra 7 handled heat best, likely thanks to its larger chassis. The OmniBook X Flip 14 and X Flip 16 (AMD) both got noticeably warm and had more audible fan noise.
Battery life was strong across the board in light-use scenarios:
Only nit: all charging ports are on one side, which can create cable clutter.
Let’s be blunt—do not buy these at full MSRP. HP inflates the price so they can advertise big markdowns. Wait for a $300–$400 discount, which can happen regularly on any of these.
For example, the more premium OmniBook Ultra was on sale for less than these Flips' MSRPs during our testing—and it has better build quality, a Ryzen 9 chip, and 32GB of RAM.
14 Inches | 16 GB | 512 GB | Ryzen AI 5 340
14 Inches | 16 GB | 512 GB | Core Ultra 7 255H
13 Inches | 16 GB | 512 GB | M4 8-Core
The HP OmniBook X and 7 Flip series are solid picks—at the right price. They offer respectable performance, good battery life, and flexible 2-in-1 functionality. But they’re only worth considering if:
Skip them if you want:
16 GB | 16 Inches | 512 GB | Core Ultra 5 226V