The best cheap laptops under $1,000, according to our testing

Stay tuned to see if the new M4 Apple MacBook Air makes the cut.
By
Haley Henschel
 on 
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission.

Overview

Best cheap MacBook (for now)

Apple MacBook Air, 13-inch (M2)

Jump to Details
Best cheap Windows laptop

Lenovo Yoga 7i 14 (Gen 9)

Jump to Details
Best cheap Microsoft laptop

Microsoft Surface Laptop Go 3

Jump to Details
Best cheap Chromebook

HP Chromebook Plus 15.6

Jump to Details
Best cheap gaming laptop

Acer Nitro V 15

Jump to Details
An even cheaper gaming laptop

Acer Chromebook Plus 516 GE

Jump to Details
See 1 More

Table of Contents

When it comes to shopping for the best cheap laptops, you can do a lot for less than $1,000. (Heck, even $500 cuts some mustard nowadays.) But you'll probably have to make some compromises along the way to stay below that price point.

That doesn't mean you have to settle for a total clunker that doesn't tick any of the boxes on your must-have specs list. It just means you have to shop a little smarter than someone with unlimited funds.

That's where we come in. The Mashable team is constantly reviewing new laptops with different operating systems and use cases, and we recommend several affordable machines that meet most, if not all of our performance, battery life, and build quality standards.

Our top picks

As of March 2025, we think the Lenovo Yoga 7i 14 (Gen 9) is the best cheap Windows laptop we've tested. It has a peppy processor and a good battery life, it doubles as a tablet, and it starts at $899.99.

If you're really into Microsoft machines, look into the Surface Laptop Go 3. The company's current cheapest offering is a super portable notebook with a chic look and a clicky keyboard — though I'd encourage shoppers to find it on sale, given its older CPU. It otherwise starts at $799.99.

The best cheap Chromebook is the $499 HP Chromebook Plus 15.6-inch, with its big, vibrant display and competent everyday performance. It also supports some useful AI features and multimedia editing apps.

Cheap gaming laptops don't get much better than the Acer Nitro V 15, which combines a cool design with cool Triple-A performance for $999 as tested. (The base model is only $749.) We also recommend the Acer Chromebook Plus 516 GE as an even cheaper "cheap gaming laptop" pick: It streams high-end titles well, comes with a really nice 120Hz display, and retails for only $649.

What about MacBooks?

Apple threw shoppers a curveball in launching its new M4 MacBook Air. With a starting price of $999 for the 13-inch size, it costs the same as the M2 model from mid-2022, our current "best cheap MacBook" pick. We haven't finished testing the M4 version yet, so you won't find it on any of our laptop buying guides, but it could very well be our new favorite sub-$1,000 MacBook in the near future. Our initial impressions were very positive.

With that in mind, the M2 MacBook Air remains our top pick in this category for now: It's speedy enough for most people, it lasts all day, it has an excellent keyboard, and it's easy to find on sale for extra-cheap following the M4 launch. (The Apple Store no longer sells it, but some retailers still have inventory available — which they're now trying to move.) At the time of writing, it was only $699.99 on Amazon.

Retailers are also slapping discounts on last year's M3 MacBook Air, which features a slightly faster processor, WiFi 6E support, and closed-lid support for two external displays. The last time we checked, it was $854 on Amazon and $849 at Best Buy. Those are very good deals — it originally retailed for $1,099 — but at the same time, there's now just $150-ish separating you from the newer M4 model. Unless that $150 is a dealbreaker, or if you're in a tough spot needing a new laptop ASAP, we recommend waiting to see how the M4 MacBook Air pans out in testing before going the M3 route.

Other cheap laptops on our radar

We currently have the latest Intel-powered Framework Laptop 13 on deck for testing. While it comes in just over our "budget" threshold of $1,000 when purchased prebuilt (the DIY Edition starts at $899), the fact that it's upgradable and repairable makes it seem like a solid long-term value. We were big fans of an older version.

We'll also soon review two sub-$1,000 Asus laptops. One is the all-new Asus ZenBook A14, the "world's lightest Copilot+ PC," which features an OLED display, a neutral-toned chassis made out of a durable material called "Ceraluminum," and an advertised battery life of up to 32 hours. (We briefly tried it in Asus' private showroom at CES 2025, and it left us extremely impressed.) The other is the Asus ZenBook S 15, a second-gen Copilot+ PC with a Snapdragon X Plus processor, a 3K OLED display, and an RGB keyboard. Both models start at $899.99.

Read on for Mashable's in-depth guide to the best cheap laptops of 2025. FYI: We've listed the pricing and specs of our testing units, which may not apply to each laptop's base model.

Our Pick

The Good & The Bad

  • Lightweight and thin
  • All-day battery life
  • Great keyboard
  • Speedy
  • 1080p HD webcam
  • Starts with 16GB of RAM
  • Could use more ports
  • Weird camera notch

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the 13-inch Apple MacBook Air (M2).

Who it's for

Apple's 13-inch M2 MacBook Air from mid-2022 is an average performer that supports one external display and WiFi 6, and that's all gravy for most people. It also happens to be dipping to some of its lowest prices on record as of late, which never hurts. Out of all the recent MacBooks we can currently vouch for, it feels like the best option for budget-conscious Apple users in need of a reliable everyday driver.

Why we picked this

The M2 MacBook Air "delivers everything you need [for] any job centered around using a computer," to quote Mashable Tech Reporter Alex Perry's review. That includes an all-day battery life, a snappy keyboard, and "enough horsepower to handle everyday tasks with ease." It also sports a 1080p FaceTime HD camera that produces a clear picture in low light, plus a four-speaker setup with Spatial Audio and Dolby Atmos support. Despite needing a few more ports, it effortlessly clinched our Mashable's Choice Award.

Note that Apple used to sell a 15-inch M2 MacBook Air. Some configurations were still up for grabs at retailers like Best Buy at the time of writing, but you'll spend well over $1,000 unless you buy one that's "Geek Squad Certified Refurbished."

Details

The Good & The Bad

  • Cool, peppy performance
  • Great keyboard
  • Decent battery life
  • Hinges should be stronger
  • Muted and dim display
  • Finicky trackpad

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the Lenovo Yoga 7i 14 (Gen 9).

Who it's for

Lenovo's Yoga 7i is an affordable point of entry to the realm of AI PCs. Solid everyday performance is its biggest asset, but its 2-in-1 design may also entice thrifty shoppers torn between a laptop and a tablet.

Why we picked this

Hailing from Lenovo's popular Yoga line, this convertible is an understated workhorse. A little boring, sure — the fact that it can flip into tablet and tent modes is probably the most exciting thing about it — but no-nonsense competence has its appeal. "I’m a tab hoarder, and the Yoga 7i 2-in-1 14 was able to handle my crazy daily research antics flawlessly with its Intel Core Ultra 5 125U processor," said Mashable contributor Sarah Chaney. Bonus: It doesn't run hot and won't die on you mid-day.

When you get down to nitty-gritty design details, the Yoga 7i feels a little hit or miss. Its keyboard is "well-spaced and enjoyably springy," Chaney wrote, with adjustable backlighting and a built-in Copilot key that pulls up Microsoft's AI assistant. But its trackpad was laggy in testing. Its hybrid form factor gives it versatility, but its hinges aren't super strong and its display is a bit dim. It has a good selection of ports, but we wish its USB-C ports weren't restricted to one side. Still, those cons could be put-up-withable for $900 if all you really care about is excellent performance.

Details

The Good & The Bad

  • Amazing keyboard
  • Very lightweight and portable
  • Fingerprint reader in the power button
  • High-end look
  • CPU is old
  • Dim display
  • 720p webcam
  • Battery life could be better

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the Microsoft Surface Laptop Go 3.

Who it's for

You can stretch your dollar further with other tech giants, but the 2023 Microsoft Surface Go 3 is a good cheap laptop for brand loyalists and those who want a flashy ultraportable. "I can see this being the daily driver of young students or Gen Z users seeking a laptop that can handle casual usage with style and sophistication," said former Mashable Tech Editor Kim Gedeon.

Why we picked it

The 12.4-inch Surface Laptop Go 3 is basically a "Windows Air," Gedeon wrote, with a premium build quality that wouldn't seem out of place among Apple's ranks. And don't get her started about its snappy, spiffy keyboard, which she deemed "one of the best I’ve ever used during my entire career as a laptop reviewer." Its crisp, responsive touchscreen was another highlight (though its bezels are a tad chunky).

Alas, the Surface Laptop Go 3's internals are far more underwhelming. Its 12th-generation Intel CPU is pretty long in the tooth, and its battery life clocked in at a mediocre eight-ish hours in our testing. But at least it's frequently on sale at Amazon and Best Buy: I often catch it marked down to $700 or less, which feels way more reasonable given those specs.

Details

The Good & The Bad

  • Large and colorful anti-glare display
  • Stylish metallic finish
  • Runs cool and quiet
  • Useful 'Plus' software features
  • Numeric keypad
  • Easily scratched
  • Touchpad and keyboard take some getting used to
  • Unimpressive webcam
  • Muffled speakers
  • Poor battery life

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the HP Chromebook Plus 15.6.

Who it's for

HP's Chromebook Plus 15.6 is a bottom-of-the-budget laptop geared toward Google-based productivity and casual entertainment. It makes some build quality concessions that can take some getting used to, but overall, the price is right for basic cloud-based multitasking.

Why we picked this

This big-screener from Google's "Plus" line of upgraded Chromebooks comes in at only $499. It certainly feels that cheap in some ways: Its keyboard is stiff, its touchpad is mediocre, its speakers are tinny, and its battery life sucks. But it's sort of difficult to critique those shortcomings in a meaningful way given its price point, and it's an otherwise capable budget laptop.

The Chromebook Plus 15.6 was easily able to carry me through my daily workload, which involves a lot of browsing, document writing, and email sending. (While its Geekbench 6 multi-core score is far from impressive, you don't need a ton of built-in oomph: ChromeOS is all about the cloud.) After hours, it made a nice portable entertainment device for movie-watching and cloud gaming when my household's TV was occupied — shoutout to its huge 1080p display, which is colorful and glare-free. It is made of plastic, but it feels sturdy and durable... though I somehow nicked its lid at one point during my testing period. (It literally just sat on a desk or a table the whole time. I've got nothing.)

As a Chromebook Plus, this laptop is equipped with some useful AI tools you won't find in regular Chromebooks, including Google Photos Magic Eraser and video call effects. I don't think they're revolutionary, but they're nice surprises in such a cheap machine.

Details

an Acer Nitro V 15 with a black controller resting on it on top of a wooden surface

Acer Nitro V 15

Best cheap gaming laptop

The Good & The Bad

  • Sleek design with a cool, futuristic look
  • Good power for the price
  • Runs cool
  • Quiet keyboard
  • Lousy battery life
  • 720p webcam
  • Dim display
  • Fingerprint magnet

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the Acer Nitro V 15.

Who it's for

Gedeon put things succinctly in her review: "If you're just looking for a gaming laptop that ditches all the bells and whistles for impressive gaming performance, the [Acer] Nitro V 15 is the one for you."

Why we picked this

The Mashable's Choice Award-winning Nitro V 15 is all about power, power, power — and while it strains the definition of "cheap," we do think it's the best budget gaming laptop under $1,000. The model we tested is "packed with delicious internals that can handle triple-A gaming," said Gedeon, including a 13th-gen Intel Core i7 H-series processor for desktop-level brawn and decent Nvidia GeForce RTX 4050 graphics. She found it capable of running Cyberpunk 2077, "one of the most graphics-intensive games on the market, like a champ."

Acer has made some noteworthy trade-offs to offer that level of oomph at this price point, namely in the realms of display quality (it's not bright or vivid) and extra fixings (there's no RGB keyboard or 1080p webcam). Its pathetically short battery life also means it'll set up permanent shop on your desk — preferably with a microfiber cloth at the ready nearby, as it clings to fingerprints with a passion.

Details

The Good & The Bad

  • Great battery life
  • Nice 120Hz display
  • Satisfying backlit keyboard
  • Solid performance
  • Cloud gaming is mostly smooth
  • Hefty
  • Weird lid design
  • Refresh rate can't be turned down

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the Acer Chromebook Plus 516 GE.

Who it's for

The Acer Chromebook Plus 516 GE (the "GE" stands for "gaming edition") is a budget-friendly beaut for gamers who are tired of trying to keep up with new titles' fancy hardware requirements — and those who are sick of short-winded gaming PCs.

Why we picked this

Acer's original Chromebook 516 GE from late 2022 was a fantastic cloud gaming machine, and the new "Plus" version is even better: It kept everything good about the first version — a 1080p webcam, an anti-ghosting RGB keyboard, a 120Hz display, and even its $649 price tag — then tacked on a couple upgrades. There's a newer Intel Core 5 120U processor inside of it, for one, which nabbed it the highest Geekbench 6 multi-core score out of all the Chromebooks we've tested. It also comes with a suite of Gemini AI features. Most notably, though, its battery life increased to over 10 hours per charge — that's great for a Chromebook and incredible for a gaming laptop. (As things currently stand, it's the only Chromebook we've tried that's come anywhere close to Google's "up to 10 hours of battery life" promise.)

When it comes to game-streaming capabilities, the Chromebook Plus 516 GE left Mashable's Perry "fairly impressed." He experienced some input latency when playing titles via Xbox Game Pass, but hardly noticed any video buffering or stuttering. (Games looked the best when streamed via Nvidia GeForce Now's Ultimate tier, he said.) Though Perry said he'd never swap it for his gaming consoles or Steam Deck, he called the Chromebook Plus 516 GE "an incredible value" and an "excellent" pick for anyone who's into game streaming. "If you want to cheat your way into sort of having a high-end gaming laptop, this is a way to do it," he wrote.

Next time around, Acer should just make it less clunky, clean up its lid design — the half matte/half gloss thing is "awkward," per Perry — and give users the ability to turn its refresh rate down. (That'll preserve its battery life when it's not being used for gaming.)

Details

How we tested

You can't judge a laptop by its appearance or advertised specs alone. As such, Mashable utilizes a rigorous hands-on testing process to review and recommend the best laptops to our readers.

The bulk of this laptop testing happens as part of an everyday workflow; most reviewers treat their testing units as daily drivers for at least one full work week. We believe it's important to see exactly how a laptop functions in a real-world setting, not in a lab, to accurately capture the user experience. 

We supplement these trial runs with industry-standard performance benchmarks. These are easily repeatable tests that produce scores we can use to quantify and compare different laptops' processing power. We also put every laptop through a battery life test, which varies depending on the type of laptop. For gaming laptops, we tack on two additional benchmarks that measure machines' graphical capabilities.

We record the findings of our testing in a rubric, and each laptop gets scored on a five-point scale on the basis of performance, design/build quality, battery life, and value. This rubric standardizes scoring across our laptop reviews and allows us to draw granular comparisons between models. A 0/5 is a flop that should be avoided at all costs, while a 5/5 is a laptop we can't live without. Any laptop that scores a 4.5/5 or higher receives a Mashable Choice Award.

The highest-scoring laptops are featured in our roundups of the best laptops, the best cheap laptops, the best Windows laptops, the best MacBooks, and the best gaming laptops.

Read our full laptop testing methodology.

Frequently Asked Questions


Certain times of the year are better for laptop shopping than others. If you're looking for a good deal on a laptop, we recommend buying around Black Friday, during back-to-school season (with a close watch on Amazon's Prime Day sale), and over long holiday weekends. If you're just after brand-new models with the latest specs, bargains be damned, you'll see them hitting the market in January and February after the Consumer Electronics Show (CES).

For more intel and buying tips, check out our guide to when you should buy a laptop.

Mashable Image
Haley Henschel
Senior Shopping Reporter

Haley Henschel is a Chicago-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable who reviews and finds deals on popular tech, from laptops to gaming consoles and VPNs. She has years of experience covering shopping holidays and can tell you what’s actually worth buying on Black Friday and Amazon Prime Day. Her work has also explored the driving forces behind digital trends within the shopping sphere, from dupes to 12-foot skeletons.


Recommended For You

The best laptops under $500 that won't slow you down
By Dylan Haas , Timothy Beck Werth , and Callum Bains
Lenovo Gaming Chromebook 16 sitting on a table with an Xbox controller

The best laptops for 2025, tested by our experts
the microsoft surface laptop 7 against a beige background


The best gaming laptops of 2025 no matter your budget
By Dylan Haas and Callum Bains
Razer Blade 14 sitting on a window sill

More in Tech
The very best password managers, as recommended by our experts
finger print illustration

The 4 parental control apps that top our list
illustration of eye on shield

I tried 5 Dyson Supersonic dupes that are actually worth the hype
Zuvi Halo hair dryer with gentle air attachment, round brush, and makeup bag

Amazon's Kindle Scribe makes minor improvements but it's not enough
A Kindle Scribe on a table with a laptop.


Trending on Mashable
'Black Mirror' fans, be warned: DO NOT start with 'Common People'
Chris O'Dowd and Rashida Jones star in "Black Mirror: Common People."

NYT Connections hints today: Clues, answers for April 12, 2025
Connections game on a smartphone

NYT Connections hints today: Clues, answers for April 13, 2025
Connections game on a smartphone

Wordle today: Answer, hints for April 13, 2025
Wordle game on a smartphone

NYT Strands hints, answers for April 13
A game being played on a smartphone.
The biggest stories of the day delivered to your inbox.
These newsletters may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. By clicking Subscribe, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Thanks for signing up. See you at your inbox!