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The Best Laptops for Video Editing in 2024

Film student or video pro? You don't need a studio to make a rough cut in the field. These top laptop picks can breeze through demanding video-editing tasks. See the best we've tested.

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Long ago, video editing tools escaped the edit bays of Hollywood, available now to anyone with the "right" laptop. The key question is, though: What kind of machine do you need to power through this most demanding of tasks? Here at PCMag, we've been reviewing PCs of every kind for more than 40 years, and our team evaluates laptops using rigorous, repeatable tests to assess CPU and graphics performance, screen quality, and battery life. (We also factor in design, usability, and, of course, value.) The 2023 14-inch Apple MacBook Pro is our current pick for the best overall laptop for video editing, a standard setter with top-notch performance, long battery life, and a color-rich screen. We've got additional well-vetted picks for more specific video editing needs. Check them out below (along with a handy spec comparison), and stay on for deep buying advice for buying the best video editing laptop for you.

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Since 1982, PCMag has tested and rated thousands of products to help you make better buying decisions. Read our editorial mission & see how we test.

Deeper Dive: Our Top Tested Picks

  • Apple MacBook Pro 14-Inch (2023, M3 Pro)

    Apple MacBook Pro 14-Inch (2023, M3 Pro)

    Best For Creative Consumers and Productive Pros
    4.5 Excellent

    Bottom Line:

    Apple's 2023 14-inch MacBook Pro strikes a winning balance between premium design and M3 Pro-powered performance, for a compact mobile workstation that trounces similarly priced Windows machines.
    • Pros

      • Leading M3 Pro performance
      • Astonishing 30-hour battery life
      • Snappy keyboard and excellent trackpad
      • Many helpful connections
      • Premium all-metal construction
      • New finish and color options
    • Cons

      • Too heavy for easy portability
      • Configuration prices balloon quickly
      • No touch screen
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  • Apple MacBook Pro 16-Inch (M3 Max)

    Apple MacBook Pro 16-Inch (M3 Max)

    Best Mac Workstation Laptop
    4.5 Excellent

    Bottom Line:

    Apple's 2023 16-inch MacBook Pro is a fully loaded laptop that goes from premium consumer desktop replacement to elite professional workstation with the M3 Max chip.
    • Pros

      • Fiery M3 Max processor
      • Beautiful Liquid Retina XDR display
      • Ample configuration options
      • Abundant ports and connectivity
      • Superb battery life
    • Cons

      • Expensive, particularly for higher configurations
      • Inconsistent GPU performance in testing
      • No touch screen
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  • Dell XPS 15 (9530, 2023)

    Dell XPS 15 (9530, 2023)

    Best for Style-Minded High-End Productivity
    4.5 Excellent

    Bottom Line:

    Fully focused on new silicon, the latest Dell XPS 15 laptop adds long battery life to leading performance accessed by a gorgeous OLED touch screen, retaining its best-in-class status.
    • Pros

      • Faster performance than ever
      • GeForce RTX 40 Series GPUs
      • Brilliant OLED touch screen
      • Premium build quality
      • Long battery life
    • Cons

      • Limited graphics performance ceiling
      • Still has 720p webcam
      • USB-C ports only (adapter included)
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  • Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2

    Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2

    Best for Digital Drafters and Other Creative Pros
    4.5 Excellent

    Bottom Line:

    Microsoft's Surface Laptop Studio 2 significantly ramps up the performance with modern parts and dedicated AI processing—all while maintaining the unique pull-forward touch-screen design.
    • Pros

      • Convertible touch screen becomes drafting tablet
      • Latest Intel and Nvidia silicon
      • Dedicated neural chip for local AI
      • 120Hz screen refresh rate
      • Added USB-A and microSD
      • Long battery life
      • Cleverly located, charging magnetic stylus holder
    • Cons

      • Surface Pen still sold separately
      • Expensive
      • Just-okay Adobe RGB and DCI-P3 color coverage
      • AI boosts only Windows Studio Effects, for now
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  • Dell Precision 5680

    Dell Precision 5680

    Best for Occasionally Mobile Design and Rendering Pros
    4.0 Excellent

    Bottom Line:

    With help from Nvidia's newest mobile professional GPU, the Dell Precision 5680 is a competitive laptop workstation that matches rivals' performance while being lighter and longer lasting.
    • Pros

      • Blazing CPU and GPU performance
      • Beautiful 4K OLED touch screen
      • Decent battery life
      • Relatively trim and light
    • Cons

      • No USB-A or Ethernet ports
      • Balky touchpad
      • ECC memory not available
      • Expensive
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  • HP Spectre x360 14 (2024)

    HP Spectre x360 14 (2024)

    Best for Remote Workers, Note-Takers, and Document Marker-Uppers
    4.0 Excellent

    Bottom Line:

    The latest iteration of HP's 14-inch, OLED-screened Spectre x360 holds onto its reign as a top-tier laptop/tablet hybrid, especially for frequent video callers.
    • Pros

      • Gorgeous OLED touch screen
      • Impressive productivity performance
      • Lengthy battery life
      • Elegant design
      • World-class webcam
    • Cons

      • Expensive when fully loaded
      • No SD/microSD card slot or cellular internet
      • No HDMI port (two USB-C docks included)
      • No internal pen storage
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  • Lenovo Slim Pro 9i (14.5-Inch)

    Lenovo Slim Pro 9i (14.5-Inch)

    Best for Creative Apps on the Road
    4.0 Excellent

    Bottom Line:

    The 14.5-inch Lenovo Slim Pro 9i combines an impressive mini LED display with ample performance for content creators on the go.
    • Pros

      • Stellar mini LED screen
      • Strong metal design
      • Tactile keyboard
      • Impressive speakers
    • Cons

      • Performance isn't class-leading
      • Touchpad clicks loudly
  • Gigabyte Aero 16 (2023)

    Gigabyte Aero 16 (2023)

    Best For Creatives Needing an Excellent Screen and Lots of Ports
    4.0 Excellent

    Bottom Line:

    A slick content-creator laptop, Gigabyte's Aero 16 OLED keeps pace with top-rated competitors, while costing less and beating most of them on port selection.
    • Pros

      • Impressive OLED screen returns
      • Satisfying TKL keyboard
      • Sturdy aluminum body
      • MicroSD card slot
      • Decently priced
    • Cons

      • Short battery life
      • Single, rear-mounted USB-A port
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  • Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo 16 (2023)

    Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo 16 (2023)

    Best For Mobile PC Gamers Who Want a Cool Gimmick
    3.5 Good

    Bottom Line:

    Equal parts expensive and impressively designed, the revamped dual-display Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo 16 delivers top-end frame rates and processing power to big-budget gaming-laptop shoppers.
    • Pros

      • Elegant, slim design despite dual displays and top-end power
      • Top-tier gaming performance with Ryzen 9 7000 CPU, RTX 4090 GPU
      • Super-bright mini LED main display with 340Hz refresh rate
      • Genuinely useful second touch screen, with a helpful custom menu
    • Cons

      • Awkward keyboard and touchpad layout
      • Exorbitantly expensive, including the starting price
      • Poor battery life
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Buying Guide: The Best Laptops for Video Editing in 2024

When it comes to choosing your ideal video editing laptop, a few features and specifications that you should pay close attention to rise to the top. Display specs are especially important, especially if you use your laptop for more advanced editing tasks such as shading and color correction. A comfortable keyboard is a must, too, since keyboard shortcuts help streamline many editing tasks, from starting and stopping playback to adding keyframes.

(Credit: Brian Westover)

Finally, note a few features common on laptops that you don't need to worry about when buying a mobile video-editing station. Chief among them is battery life, since video editing consumes so much power that your laptop will probably spend most of its time plugged in. If editing on the road is a must, you might want a spare power adapter for hotel rooms, and make sure your flight has in-seat power outlets before you buy a ticket. Neither will you get much use out of a touch screen or a convertible laptop that doubles as a tablet, unless you're looking for a machine that you'll also use for web browsing and watching videos after the end of a long day of shooting and editing.


What CPU and Memory to Get in a Video Editing Laptop?

The CPU and memory are the two most essential laptop components for video editors. Modern video editing applications are optimized to take advantage of today's multi-core CPUs, which usually means that the more cores you have, the better, all else being equal. Multithreading, which enables each core to handle two processing threads simultaneously, is also important. To learn more about the CPU in the laptop you're eyeing, look it up in Intel's product directory or on AMD's Ryzen CPU product pages. Any chip you are eyeing for serious video work should have at least six cores and support multithreading for 12 concurrent processing threads. High-end laptop chips can support up to eight "high-performance" cores and 16 threads, with even more cores available on some of the latest high-end chips, especially with Intel's addition of plentiful Efficient cores (E-cores) on its latest mobile CPUs. (For a broader overview of laptop CPUs, check out our deep-dive guide on understanding the CPUs that go into notebooks.)

For a bird's-eye view of how a higher processor core count increases performance, you'll want to check out how well the laptop you're considering fares on our Cinebench benchmark, which is listed in the performance section of each review. This test uses software from video-effects titan Maxon to spit out a proprietary score based on how quickly the PC can render a 3D image. Although multiple factors can influence the score, in general, the more (and faster) cores the CPU has, and the more addressable threads it supports, the quicker the image renders. The principle is the same for video-editing software such as Apple Final Cut Pro and Adobe Premiere Pro, which are engineered to distribute compute tasks over multiple cores, just like Cinebench.

(Credit: Molly Flores)

In general, CPUs with the power-laptop-oriented H series from AMD or Intel (look for an "H" at or toward the end of the CPU's model name) will be the best match for video editing. They offer more addressable cores and threads, higher voltages, and sometimes faster clock speeds than alternatives designed for thin-and-light laptops (the U series, which nowadays end in a "U" or on some older chips a "G," with the G followed by a number). AMD and Intel use the same conventions (barring the "G" in AMD's case) on their mobile CPUs.

As for main system memory, a good rule of thumb is insisting on at least 16GB of RAM. For many consumer ultraportables, this is the limit, although you can now order creator-class laptops with 32GB or more. The cost can be prohibitive, however, and we think if your budget is tight, the money is better spent on a faster CPU, so we're calling 16GB the sweet spot, with 32GB as a stretch goal.


Should I Get a Hard Drive or an SSD (or Both) in a Video Editing Laptop?

You'll want a fast boot drive to complete the trifecta of principal specs. Nowadays, this means configuring a laptop with a solid-state drive (SSD), which can access data much faster than older spinning drives. Indeed, no modern video-editing laptop will have anything but an SSD for a boot drive. For everyday computing, the speed difference between an SSD and a spinning-platter hard drive is vast, since an SSD's main skill is decreasing boot times and making apps load faster. These factors are essential for video editing (loading editing applications can take some time if you tend to edit under pressure), and an SSD will also offer noticeable speed gains on specialized tasks such as playing back multiple clips at once or working with 4K footage.

If you can't afford a single roomy multi-terabyte SSD in your editing rig, ideally you want a spacious hard drive (for mass storage) in addition to a speedy SSD. But since the cost of built-in SSDs skyrockets at capacities above 2TB, it could be more cost-effective to make sure your laptop has a Thunderbolt 3 or Thunderbolt 4 connection to enable a link to a fast external drive where you'll store most of your footage. That said, some larger workstation and gaming machines can offer two drives (an SSD boot drive, plus a roomy platter-based hard drive), and if you're in the market for a big machine, this is an ideal video editors' arrangement: both speed and mass storage at your disposal, without external-drive hassles.

(Credit: Kyle Cobian)

When assessing SSDs, know that most machines relevant for video editing have moved toward SSDs using the PCI Express bus (often associated with the term "NVMe," for a protocol that affords faster data transfers than ever). These are faster than drives that use the older SATA interface, which are less common in midrange and high-end laptops than they used to be. (See our favorite internal SSDs.)


Graphics Acceleration: For Video Editing, Do You Need a Dedicated GPU or Not?

Most non-gaming laptops come with graphics-acceleration silicon that's part of the CPU, not a separate graphics processing chip (GPU). This arrangement offers weak performance if you're playing richly detailed, AAA-grade video games, but it's actually fine for many video-editing scenarios. Nearly all video-editing suites are designed to take advantage of more powerful processors, but the ability to leverage powerful graphics-processing hardware isn't as common.

There are a few exceptions. For example, a discrete GPU can speed up the video-encoding process in Final Cut Pro X, and Blackmagic's Davinci Resolve editing suite has a video-playback engine that's optimized for powerful GPUs. Still, it's best to save GPU-accelerated editing tasks for when you return to the studio and a more powerful desktop, if possible.

That said, if the laptop you're considering offers an entry-level discrete GPU for a reasonable premium (say, $200 or so), there's little reason not to spring for it and enjoy the added speed boost when you're rendering or exporting video, depending on the software you use. You can get a comparative idea of a laptop's graphics performance by glancing at its relative scores on our 3DMark benchmark tests. Of course, if you're a gamer on the side, you can leverage a GeForce or Radeon dedicated chip for both playtime and editing time.


Connectivity: What Ports Do I Need in a Video Editing Laptop?

If you're already carrying dozens of pounds of camera and lighting equipment, the last thing you want is to add weight to your bag. Luckily, many very powerful laptops weigh less than 4 pounds these days. The thinnest and lightest won't have discrete GPUs or displays larger than 14 inches. Still, you may be able to do without these features, especially if you've got a studio with a more powerful editing station where you do most of your cutting.

If you're slimming down, however, try not to lose too many ports. We recommend at least one Thunderbolt port, which lets you connect to external displays via the DisplayPort standard, lightning-fast external drives, and pretty much any USB peripheral, such as external mice or keyboards, with the correct cabling or via an adapter. (Thunderbolt 3 or 4 ports are physically and electrically compatible with USB Type-C ports.) Some laptops, including all MacBook Pro models, only include Thunderbolt ports. The sweet spot is one or two Thunderbolt ports, and one or two regular USB 3.0 or USB 3.1 ports.  

(Credit: Molly Flores)

A full-size SD card slot is handy for transferring footage directly from your camera to your laptop, and all laptops should have an audio port for connecting headphones to use while editing on the plane or in a cafe.


Assessing the Display: What's the Best Screen Size for a Video-Editing Laptop?

With most mainstream and better laptops these days offering at least full HD (1,920-by-1,080-pixel) resolution, your primary screen consideration should be screen size, not pixel count. A screen between 15- and- 18 inches will let you see more of your project timeline, but it comes at the expense of weight and heft. Meanwhile, a 12-inch display could have you squinting.

The sweet spot, therefore, if you need to travel with your editing machine is 13 or 14 inches. Many laptops squeeze a 13-inch or 14-inch screen into a chassis that otherwise would hold a smaller display by slimming down the bezel, or border, around the screen. But an important note: Most laptops of this screen size will bounce you down to a U-series processor. You'll tend to find the most powerful CPUs in models at the 15-inch and larger sizes. That is because the bigger the laptop, the more thermal leeway the designer has for including more powerful components.

While full HD resolution is satisfactory for many editing tasks, if you shoot primarily in 4K, you want a screen resolution to match. Combine a 4K (that is, 3,840-by-2,160-pixel) screen, a six- or eight-core processor, and a discrete GPU, though, and you'll likely end up with relatively short battery life. So, if you settle on a 4K screen, make sure it's feasible that you'll stick near a power outlet most of the time, and consider buying an external battery charger to use in a pinch.

At the other end of the spectrum, don't choose a resolution below full HD (such as 1,366 by 768 pixels) in any video-editing machine. That said, new laptops with screens less than full HD (1,920 by 1,080 pixels) are uncommon except in the very lowest-cost machines. None of those will be any good for video editing.

(Credit: Molly Flores)

If your video-editing tasks mostly involve arranging clips, mixing audio, and the like, you probably don't need to worry about the display's color capabilities. For more artistic or precision-minded jobs, though, such as shading and color correction, you'll want to pay attention to how many colors the screen can display and how it calibrates the color profile. Look for specs like DCI-P3 or Adobe RGB color-gamut support and automatic calibration features often rolled into a single marketing moniker such as HP's DreamColor. OLED screens and those with HDR support offer greater color contrast and could also be helpful. (See our favorite OLED-screen laptops.)

(Credit: Molly Flores)

As mentioned earlier, you probably don't need to worry about whether the laptop has a touch screen. Video editing involves precision and repetition, which are best suited to keyboard shortcuts and a mouse, not touch input. The one exception is the MacBook Pro's venerable Touch Bar, a narrow, secondary touch screen perched forward of the keyboard, between it and the screen. It was designed with apps like Final Cut Pro and the Adobe Creative Suite in mind and pops up context-relevant shortcuts with supported software. But you'll only see it in older aftermarket MacBooks; Apple has phased it out with the release of the M3 MacBook Pros.


Editing Platform Basics: Mac or PC?

Video editors are among the creative professionals who stereotypically prefer to use Macs instead of PCs. Whether or not you fit that stereotype, if you're a veteran of the industry, you probably already have a preference, so we won't try to change your mind.

(Credit: Brian Westover)

If you're OS-agnostic, however, you have a vast array of hardware choices if you choose a PC over a Mac laptop. The biggest advantage of going with Windows or Linux is the possibility of buying a workstation-class laptop with a many-core Intel Xeon processor, something not available on any Mac portable. That said, if you are a proponent of a video editor that works natively with Apple Silicon, such as the latest Mac versions of Adobe Premiere Pro, that alone may be the decider for you to get on the M3-powered MacBook train.

Another OS consideration is your specific video-editing software preference. For example, Final Cut Pro works only on Macs, although most other editing suites, from Premiere Pro to Avid Media Composer, are available on multiple platforms. If you're married to one program or another, we'd expect that to play into your decision just as much as, if not more than, the OS itself or the hardware available.


Ready to Buy the Best Video Editing Laptop for You?

Here, we've selected a host of our top-rated models for video editing. Some are earmarked for content creators; some are mobile workstations; and a few are thin-and-light models. Any of them should be powerful enough for at least casual editing, and some are muscled-up enough for major editing tasks.

Ultimately, how much you'll have to budget depends on whether you're using your video-editing laptop only for quick work in the field or plan to bring it back to the studio, plug it in, and use it as your primary machine. If you're going the former route, you'll also want to look at our best desktops when upgrading your main rig. If you're choosing the latter, you might want to familiarize yourself with our list of best gaming laptops, one of which may offer the power—especially the heftier CPU—you need for marathon editing sessions on deadline night. Color-precise screens tend not to be their forte, but good gaming laptops have many of the traits you need in a good video editing laptop.

Compare SpecsThe Best Laptops for Video Editing in 2024
Our Pick
Editor's Rating
Editors' Choice
4.5 Excellent
Review
Editors' Choice
4.5 Excellent
Review
Editors' Choice
4.5 Excellent
Review
Editors' Choice
4.5 Excellent
Review
Editors' Choice
4.0 Excellent
Review
Editors' Choice
4.0 Excellent
Review
Editors' Choice
4.0 Excellent
Review
4.0 Excellent
Review
3.5 Good
Review
Wireless Networking
Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3802.11ax (Wi-Fi 6), BluetoothWi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3Wi-Fi 6E, BluetoothWi-Fi 7, Bluetooth802.11ax, Bluetooth 5.3Wi-Fi 6E, BluetoothWi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth
Weight
3.54.84.24.184.463.193.714.65.9
Variable Refresh Support
ProMotionProMotionNoneManualNoneDynamicManualNoneNone
Touch Screen
Tested Battery Life (Hours:Minutes)
30:2727:5314:0315:2313:0718:037:488:093:08
Secondary Drive Type
SSD
Secondary Drive Capacity (as Tested)
512
Screen Size
14.216.215.614.4161414.51616
Screen Refresh Rate
120120601206012016560240
RAM (as Tested)
1812832643232323232
Processor Speed
2.5
Processor
Apple M3 ProApple M3 MaxIntel Core i7-13700HIntel Core i7-13700HIntel Core i9-13900HIntel Core Ultra 7 155HIntel Core i7-13705HIntel Core i9-13900HAMD Ryzen 9 7945HX
Panel Technology
Mini LEDMini LEDOLEDIPSOLEDOLEDMini LEDOLEDMini LED
Operating System
Apple macOSApple macOSWindows 11Windows 11Windows 11 ProWindows 11 ProWindows 11 HomeWindows 11Windows 11 Pro
Native Display Resolution
3024 by 19643456 by 22343456 by 21602400 by 16003840 by 24002880 by 18003072 by 19203840 by 24002560 by 1600
Graphics Processor
Apple M3 Pro (14-core)Apple M3 Max (40-core GPU)Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Laptop GPUNvidia GeForce RTX 4060 Laptop GPUNvidia RTX 5000 AdaIntel Arc GraphicsNvidia GeForce RTX 4050 Laptop GPUNvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Laptop GPUNvidia GeForce RTX 4090
Graphics Memory
88166816
Dimensions (HWD)
0.61 by 12.3 by 8.7 inches0.66 by 14 by 9.8 inches0.71 by 13.6 by 9.1 inches0.86 by 12.72 by 9.06 inches0.87 by 13.9 by 9.5 inches0.67 by 12.4 by 8.7 inches0.69 by 12.87 by 8.8 inches0.87 by 13.9 by 10.1 inches0.81 by 14 by 10.4 inches
Class
WorkstationWorkstation, Desktop ReplacementDesktop ReplacementConvertible 2-in-1, Desktop ReplacementWorkstation, BusinessConvertible 2-in-1, UltraportableDesktop ReplacementDesktop ReplacementGaming, Desktop Replacement
Boot Drive Type
SSDSSDSSDSSDSSDSSDSSDSSDSSD
Boot Drive Capacity (as Tested)
5128115122112

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