HP announced new laptop branding last year at CES, but for the most part, it just slapped new names on old designs. The new OmniBook models looked like outgoing Pavilions. OmniBook X units took the shape of older Envys. And there was little to distinguish the flagship OmniBook Ultra from the previous Spectre. Today at CES 2026, HP finally added new designs to go with its new(ish) laptop names, overhauling the entire OmniBook series.
HP also announced an update to its OmniStudio all-in-one with an Neo:LED display, Thunderbolt Share and a tilting Surface View webcam.
Let's dive in.
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New OmniBook look
At the top of HP's OmniBook line of consumer laptops sits the OmniBook Ultra 14, and it no longer looks like the former Spectre it replaces. Made from forged anodized aluminum, the OmniBook Ultra 14 offers stunning looks and cuts an impressively thin profile. HP says it's the "world's slimmest consumer notebook with the fastest AI performance."
For the slim submission, HP says the OmniBook Ultra 14 is just 0.29 inches in front, 0.42 inches in the back, reaching a maximum height of 0.55 inches somewhere between each edge. I didn't have a ruler with me when I saw it, but I can say that it looked like one of the thinnest laptops I've seen.
At 2.81 pounds, it's not heavy, but HP isn't making any claims about it being one of the lightest 14-inch laptops in the world. I don't mind the average weight because it comes with a feeling of toughness. The chassis felt rigid when I picked it up, and HP says it passed 20 MIL-STD tests for durability.
The OmniBook Ultra 14 offers both Intel Core Ultra Series 3 and Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 processors, and that brings us to the AI assertion. Outfitted with a Snapdragon X2 Elite, the OmniBook Ultra 14 will have an 85 TOPS NPU to power through local AI workloads. That's nearly double the 45 TOPS of Qualcomm's first Snapdragon X Elite chips.
Other specs for the OmniBook Ultra 14 include a 3K OLED display and up to 64GB of RAM and a 2TB SSD. HP expects the OmniBook Ultra 14 to start shipping later this month starting at $1,550.
The lower-tier OmniBook laptops also received design refreshes and will be available in the coming months. The OmniBook X and OmniBook 7 won't start shipping until the spring, but the two lowest-end models are slated for February releases. The OmniBook 5 will start at $850, and the OmniBook 3 will start at $500.
Snapdragon X2 series chips will be offered in every OmniBook series along with 2K OLED displays. It's notable that even the entry-level OmniBook 3 series will let you upgrade to an OLED.
All-in-one with new Neo-LED display, better sharing
HP has shrunk the size of its OmniStudio X 27, added a new display and an easier way to share files between it and your laptop.
Previously available in 27- and 32-inch sizes, HP's all-in-one is now offered with a 24- or 27-inch display. But now the 27-inch display on the OmniStudio X 27 is a Neo:LED display, which is an IPS panel with a mini-LED backlight for better brightness, deeper blacks for near-OLED contrast, and finer light control with less blooming than a traditional LED-backlit IPS display. The 27-inch Neo:LED display has a 2,560x1,440-pixel resolution, 120Hz refresh rate, a 450-nit brightness rating and 100% Adobe RGB and 100% DCI-P3 color coverage.
The OmniBook X 27 offers Thunderbolt Share that will let you shuttle and sync files between it and your laptop simply by connecting the two with a Thunderbolt cable. The other notable feature is a Surface View webcam that you can tilt to share information on your desk in front of the computer, which could be helpful for sharing materials during presentations.
The OmniStudio X 27 starts at $1,500. HP expects pre-orders to open later this week but has yet to share a shipping date.
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