Best video editing laptop 2025: 6 picks tested and reviewed

The best video editing laptops hit at least two out of three must-have features: performance, battery life, and a bright and vivid display. Those are important for any of the best laptops, but even more-so for visual creatives. These are also often some of the best laptops for college, especially for majors working in media.

The better your laptop's performance, the less time you'll have to wait for it to finish transcoding a video file or rendering a 3D animation. Video editing laptops without discrete graphics cards are usually cheaper than ones with them, but that means it relies on its processor to do all those things. It's important to have one fast enough to process large files efficiently.

Display color and accuracy is also important for video editing. This is why Laptop Mag measures the DCI-P3 gamut coverage of every laptop we test. It's the color space used in professional digital cinema, capturing about 25% more color variations than the standard SRGB. As a general guideline, the best laptops for video editing should cover at least 85% of the DCI-P3 gamut.

Apple's newest 16-inch MacBook Pro with an M4 Pro chip is my best overall pick for its exceptional performance, battery life, and display. A more versatile and affordable option is the 2-in-1 Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x, with a wider display color gamut than the MacBook Air. For gamers, there's the Acer Predator Helios 16 that offers high-end gaming and video editing performance at a reasonable price.

This page is constantly updated based on our latest reviews to reflect Laptop Mag's current picks for the best video editing laptops in 2025.

Quick Menu

CURATED BY
Joanna Nelius author photo for Laptop Mag
CURATED BY
Joanna Nelius

Joanna Nelius has reviewed laptops and computer hardware since 2018. Her work has appeared in The Verge, USA Today, Gizmodo, PC Gamer, and Maximum PC. She holds an MFA from Chapman University and works as a creative writing instructor.

Best overall

The video editing champion

Specifications

CPU: Apple M4 Pro (14-core)
GPU: Apple M4 Pro (20-core)
RAM: 48GB
Storage: 2TB
Display: 16.2-inch (3456 x 2234) 120Hz Liquid Retina XDR display
Size: 14 x 9.77 x 0.66 inches
Weight: 4.7 pounds

Reasons to buy

+
Almost 21 hours of battery life
+
Unmatched performance
+
Crystal clear webcam
+
Astoundingly bright display
+
Robust stereo sound

Reasons to avoid

-
No Face ID
-
Awkward vent placement
-
Upgrades get expensive
Why is it our best overall pick?

The MacBook Pro 16 M4 Pro is an improvement over the M3 Max, our previous best overall pick, in nearly every way — at a less expensive price.

Buy it if

✔️ You skipped the M3 MacBook generation. The performance increase alone will feel like you're in a roller coaster shooting out of a loading bay.

✔️ You want discrete GPU power without the separate card. And to spare yourself the usual noise and heat that comes with those kinds of video editing laptops.

Don't buy it if

✖️ You already have an M3 Max. It's not worth spending thousands of dollars on a new laptop for a minor performance or battery life increase.

✖️ You don't need all the power it offers. Again, not worth spending thousands of dollars on a MacBook Pro if you occasionally edit videos.

If you're a professional video editor in need of a new laptop that can breeze through heavy video and 3D rendering workloads, we recommend the newest 16-inch Apple MacBook Pro with an M4 Pro processor.

Laptop Mag's managing editor, Sean Riley, describes it best in his review: "It's almost simultaneously the most powerful premium laptop we've reviewed while also offering the second-longest battery of any laptop we've tested." Our benchmark numbers mostly speak for themselves.

With 20 hours and 46 minutes of battery life, it lasts 7 hours longer than the average premium laptop and its main competitors, the Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i 16 Gen 9 and Asus ProArt PX16 (2024), between 10 and 11 hours, respectively. It also outlasts the MacBook Pro M3 Max by nearly 3 hours.

It outshines them all in the Geekbench 6 multicore benchmark, scoring 22,822. That's 47% faster than the Yoga Pro (12,141), 32% faster than the ProArt PX16 (15,286), and over 100% more than the average premium laptop (10,492). Compared to the M3 Max (21,182), that's an 8% speed increase; remember that the 16-inch Max configurations start at $3,499.

If you happen to be upgrading from an M2 Max, you might need help picking your jaw up off the floor: the M4 Pro was 45% faster in Laptop Mag's tests by comparison. My fiancé recently traded in his M2 Max for an M4 Pro, and while he didn't convey his excitement in words he did make happy grunting noises.

Everything else about this MacBook Pro is just as good or better than previous generations. It's still expensive, but it's our best overall pick for a reason.

See our full MacBook Pro 16 M4 Pro review.

Best budget

Performance and portability at a great price

Specifications

CPU: Apple M4 (10-core)
GPU: Apple M4 (10-core)
RAM: 16GB
Storage: 512GB
Display: 15.3-inch (2880 x 1864) Liquid Retina
Size: 13.4 x 9.35 x 0.45 inches
Weight: 3.3 pounds

Reasons to buy

+
$100 cheaper than its predecessor
+
Strong performance
+
Over 15 hours of battery life
+
Bright Liquid Retina display
+
Class-leading webcam

Reasons to avoid

-
Limited ports
-
Upgrades can get expensive
Why is it our best budget pick?

The Apple MacBook Air 15 M4 is thin, light, powerful, and has a long-lasting battery. It has nearly everything a video editor (or student) on a budget needs in a laptop.

Buy it if

✔️ You're looking to cut costs. Without sacrificing too much performance, battery life, or other things that make a Mac laptop great.

✔️ You want an easy-to-carry laptop. This one weighs just over 3 pounds and is under a half-inch thick. Check and check!

Don't buy it if

✖️ You don't want to spend a lot of money on upgrades. Apple dropped the starting price of the Air M4, but adding more RAM or increasing the storage size is still as expensive as ever.

✖️ You need larger or more colorful display. The Air's color accuracy isn't as good as its Pro sibling, and if you know you want a 16-inch screen, its 15.3-inch display might be too small for your work.

15-inch laptops are increasingly rare these days, but as Laptop Mag managing editor Sean Riley writes in his review, the new Apple MacBook Air 15 M4 "deserves to be in the conversation." He gave it 4.5 stars for a good reason! It offers many of the same benefits for video editors as the pricier Pro M4, and its performance and battery life are still unparalleled compared to many of its budget competitors.

Its CPU multicore performance is nearly 38% faster than the 15-inch Air M3, according to our testing. In our real-world video transcoding test, the Air M4 converted a 4K video to 1080p in just under 5 minutes — 2 minutes faster than the Air M3.

The Air M4's display isn't the most vibrant or color-accurate screen you can get, but it covers a larger portion of the DCI-P3 color gamut compared to last year's Air M3 (83.5% versus 77.8%). For video editors on a budget who want the largest laptop display possible, that's less of a compromise between the Air M4 and 14-inch M4 Pro — and you still get Apple's True Tone technology, which adjusts how colors are displayed depending on the lighting.

It's max brightness is 476 nits, just like last year's model, and it's battery still lasts 15 hours, too. The Air M4's other features have mostly stayed the same or improved, which is especially great considering Apple dropped the 15-inch Air M4's starting price by $100.

If you currently have an Air M2, you're in the best position to get the most out of your money by upgrading.

See our full Apple MacBook Air 15 M4 review.

Best touchscreen

Versatile, vibrant, and very fast

Specifications

CPU: Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-78-100
GPU: Qualcomm Adreno
RAM: 16GB
Storage: 512GB SSD
Display: 14.5-inch 3K (2994 x 1840) OLED touch display
Size: 12.8 x 8.8 x 0.51 inches
Weight: 2.8 pounds

Reasons to buy

+
Impressive battery life
+
Fantastic keyboard
+
Sharp OLED display
+
Strong multi-core performance

Reasons to avoid

-
Mediocre gaming performance
-
No USB Type-A ports
-
Reflective display
Why is it our best touchscreen pick?

The Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x's bright, OLED display covers an overly generous portion of the DCI-P3 color gamut. It also gets fantastic performance and battery life, yet stays cool to the touch.

Buy it if

✔️ You want to go literally hands-on with your video editing — The Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x delivers a stellar all-around experience, including that touchscreen display, which can be faster than a mouse and keyboard in certain situations.

✔️ You are on a budget. The Yoga Slim 7x offers the main features of a great video editing laptop without the high price.

Don't buy it if

✖️ Windows on ARM doesn't support your editing software. While this is less of an issue now than when this laptop was first released, it's still best to check for native ARM64 versions or that the x86 version can run fine via emulation.

✖️ You need more storage space, and you're not interested in buying an external drive; this laptop's SSD capacity is smaller than we recommend (even for hobbyists), and maxes out at 1TB.

For a touchscreen laptop, the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x has all the makings of a great video editing machine. Laptop Mag's reviewer, Stevie Bonifield, writes that it "balances price and performance with a stylish design and strong battery life," on top of a sharp OLED display that produces vivid colors and inky blacks.

This laptop's DCI-P3 color gamut coverage is one of the widest Laptop Mag has seen in the last year: 155%. The display also gets bright, hitting a max of 464 nits in SDR and 785 nits in HDR. 431 nits is also the average SDR brightness for a premium laptop, so the Yoga Slim 7x is right on the money here.

It's essential for any creativity laptop to have fast multicore performance, as many creativity programs make full use of all the CPU's cores simultaneously. The Yoga Slim 7x has speed in spades. With a Snapdragon X Elite processor, it cranked out a benchmark score of 13,750 in Geekbench 6, making it faster than many similar-priced laptops.

That doesn't directly translate to some real-world video workloads, however, the Yoga Slim 7x was still able to transcode a 4K video to 1080p in just over 5 minutes. That's still faster than what Laptop Mag has seen from some competing laptops with an Intel Core Ultra 7 155H.

The Yoga Slim 7x has two potential downsides as a video editing laptop: app compatibility and its reflective OLED display. You might need to max out the display brightness to get rid of any lighting glare (which, of course, will shorten the battery life; the brighter the display, the more power it needs).

Also, make sure your favorite editing app has a native ARM64 version since this laptop runs Windows on ARM. For most people, this shouldn't be an issue as popular programs like Premiere Pro, After Effects, Blender, and DaVinci Resolve are compatible. But it's always good to double-check!

See our full Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x review.

Best gaming

Video editing and gaming gold

Specifications

CPU: Intel Core i9-14900HX
GPU: Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080
RAM: 32GB
Storage: 2TB SSD
Display: 16-inch (2560 x 1600) 240Hz IPS
Size: 14.1 x 10.9 x 1 ~ 1.1 inches
Weight: 5.9 pounds

Reasons to buy

+
Bright and colorful display
+
Powerful RTX 4080 performance
+
Superb processing power
+
Excellently priced

Reasons to avoid

-
Weak speakers
-
Lacking battery life
Why is it our best gaming pick?

The Acer Predator Helios 16 is a dual purpose stand-out. Its RTX 4080 GPU can handle ray traced games at high frame rates and speed up many video editing tasks with hardware acceleration. It also offers better display color accuracy than most gaming laptops.

Buy it if

✔️ You want high frame rates and great graphics. This laptop's hardware handles some of the most demanding games with ease.

✔️ You work with large, complex video files. The graphics card can be used to speed up transcoding, processing visual effects, or even live editing.

Don't buy it if

✖️ You want great battery life. Just web browsing it lasts a little over 4 hours. This powerful laptop will need to be plugged in at all times.

✖️ You want a thin and light laptop. At 1-inch thick and weighing nearly 6 pounds, the Predator Helios 16 is a better desktop replacement than a portable workstation.

Most gaming laptops have the power to be a great video editing machine, but finding one with an equally great display at a lower than average price can be tricky. That's what makes Acer's Predator Helios 16 such a stand-out laptop. Claire Tabari writes in her review that it harnesses the power of "one of the strongest laptop GPUs without sacrificing its display quality, all at a surprisingly reasonable price point."

Gaming and movies looking stunning on this laptop's screen. Its vivid, IPS display reaches an incredible 240Hz refresh rate and covers over 100% of the DCI-P3 color gamut — Digital Cinema Initiative's defined color space for professional film and videography. It reaches a max peak brightness of 447 nits, and without glare to worry about, you should be able to see anything and everything on this display, no matter the lighting conditions.

It has the hardware to support demanding video editing workloads, whether you're a professional or a student learning the craft. Its RTX 4080 graphics card and 14th-gen Intel Core i9 processor make tasks fly, putting this laptop in the same league with workstation and other creator-focused devices.

All that performance comes at a cost, and I'm not talking about its price: at nearly 6 pounds, the Predator Helios 16 is firmly in the heavy-weight class of gaming laptops. It's also an inch-thick, so as long as you're looking for a desktop replacement, its size might not be an issue for you.

If that is the case, this laptop's battery life shouldn't be an issue either. It lasted 4 hours and 11 minutes (with the display set to 150 nits brightness) in our web browsing test, so we recommend keeping the Predator Helios 16 plugged in at all times.

See our full Acer Predator Helios 16 review.

Best Windows laptop

A stellar Windows laptop for video editing

Specifications

CPU: AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370
GPU: Nvidia RTX 4070
RAM: 32GB
Storage: 2TB SSD
Display: 16-inch 4K (3840 x 2160) 60Hz OLED touch
Size: 13.97 x 9.72 x 0.59 inches
Weight: 4.08 pounds

Reasons to buy

+
Stellar graphics performance
+
Top-firing speakers
+
Great touchpad and keyboard
+
Competitive AI performance

Reasons to avoid

-
Display could be brighter
-
Below-average battery life
Why is it our best Windows pick?

The Asus ProArt P16 offers nearly everything you'd expect out of a MacBook Pro — for a lot less.

Buy it if

✔️ You want a discrete GPU. Between multitasking, rendering, transcoding, and everything else you needed done yesterday, this laptop's graphics card will help speed up your workflow.

✔️ You work with a wide color spectrum. This laptop covers a large portion of the DCI-P3 color gamut, making is a good choice for video editors.

Don't buy it if

✖️ The apps you need are only on macOS. Used to working in Final Cut Pro? Sorry, there isn't Windows version for that.

✖️ Long battery life is a necessity. With under 10 hours of battery life, this one major area where the Asus ProArt P16 falls behind many of its competitors.

For the video editor loyal to Windows, "The Asus ProArt P16 is a stellar example of what a creator laptop should be: powerful, reliable, and stylish," as our reviewer Stevie Bonifield writes. You don't have to pay MacBook Pro prices to get superb performance in a thin and light chassis with a beautiful design that's just as easy on your eyes as it is on your wallet.

While I'd normally recommend a laptop with a wider color gamut for video editors, the ProArt P16 covers a high enough percentage of the DCI-P3 (85.5%). But if you're looking at this laptop for graphic design, that should be less of a concern since you're likely working with the AdobeRGB or sRGB color gamut.

Just as important as color accuracy is performance; this laptop's AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 processor, 32GB of RAM, and Nvidia RTX 4070 graphics card powers it to a Geekbench 6 multicore score of 15,286, way beyond the average premium laptop. Commonly used graphic design programs like Adobe Illustrator load in a snap, and the ProArt P16 has the right amount of RAM and CPU cores to prevent the system from getting too bogged down with all the processes Photoshop runs in the background.

That stellar performance played out in Laptop Mag's Handbrake benchmark, transcoding a 4K video to 1080p in 3 minutes and 15 seconds, much faster than the average premium laptop (7:58).

Its battery life is a letdown, though. Expect up to 9 hours and 32 minutes if you use this laptop for web browsing, with the display brightness set to 150 nits. If you're manipulating images with dozens of vector masks at full brightness (356 nits), the battery will drain much faster. Just something to be mindful of if your workspace doesn't have a nearby outlet.

See our full Asus ProArt P16 review.

Best workstation

Outstanding battery life for a workstation

Specifications

CPU: Intel Core Ultra 7 165H
GPU: Nvidia RTX 1000
RAM: 32GB
Storage: 1TB SSD
Display: 16-inch 1920 x 1200 IPS
Size: 13.95 x 9.49 x 0.67 inches
Weight: 4.3 pounds

Reasons to buy

+
Powerful, well-optimized performance
+
Incredible battery life
+
Modern thin and light design
+
Plenty of ports
+
Crisp, satisfying keyboard feel
+
Impressively loud, quality audio

Reasons to avoid

-
Display could be more vibrant
-
Slightly grainy webcam
Why is it our best workstation pick?

The Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 7 boasts an Ada Generation Nvidia RTX 1000 processor for professionals looking for stability and reliability. That along with long battery life in a portable design, you might forget this is a workstation instead of an average laptop.

Buy it if

✔️ Your setup has a lot of accessories. This laptop has ports-a-plenty for that: USB Type-A, USB Type-C, HDMI, an SD card reader, and 3.5mm audio.

✔️ You need long battery life. This laptop lasted over 17 hours in our web surfing battery test — and while that number will be less if you're running power-intensive tasks, it'll still get longer battery life than the average workstation.

Don't buy it if

✖️ You need a higher display resolution. You can upgrade this configuration with an optional 4K OLED panel, but that's adding on to the price tag of an already expensive laptop.

✖️ You need a more vibrant or brighter display. It covers an average portion of the DCI-P3 color gamut, and its peak brightness doesn't break 400 nits — both significantly less than some of it competitors.

For the video editor who is extra cautious about maintaining the integrity of their files' data, the Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 7 is aimed directly at that kind of professional use. "While it may not be the most powerful workstation we’ve ever seen here at Laptop Mag," our staff writer Madeline Ricchiuto writes, it has enough "performance to handle photo and video editing, 3D rendering, or heavy data analysis you’d want out of a workstation machine." It isn't impractically expensive, either (at least when it's on sale).

With a Geekbench 6 multicore benchmark average of 12,974, it's outpaced by the Apple MacBook Pro 16 M4 Pro — and even some less expensive competitors like the Asus ProArt P16 (15,286, or 16%).

However, it did transcode a 4K video 1080p in a swift 4 minutes and 21 seconds in our Handbrake benchmark test, faster than some of its competitors. Keep in mind this laptop is designed for stable and reliable workloads — slower performance is the norm when you compare this kind of workstation to any laptop with a discrete gaming graphics card, like the ProArt P16.

I don't know about you, but I'd be willing to sacrifice a little performance for this ThinkPad's battery life: an outstanding 17 hours and 23 minutes. That's as long or longer than some productivity laptops and definitely much longer than the average workstation's 5 or 6 hours!

We do wish this laptop had a better display for its price. The $4,584 configuration we reviewed is outfitted with only a 1920 X 1200 IPS panel, covering just 78.6% of the DCI-P3 color gamut. Its max brightness is 386 nits — bright enough for an IPS display to ward off glare, though not the brightest out of all the laptops on this list.

See our full Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 7 review.

Benchmark comparisons

Recently reviewed

Not every laptop can make the best video editing laptops page. (We wouldn't be doing you that much good if that were the case!) We review new laptops every week and over 100 laptops yearly, so here's a look at our most recently reviewed laptops that didn't make this page either due to a fault, battery life, performance, or something else.

Acer Predator Triton Neo 16 | Intel Core Ultra 9 185H | 	Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Acer Predator Triton Neo 16 | Intel Core Ultra 9 185H | Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Score: ★★★★

Pros: Slick general performance; smooth RTX 4060 graphics; bright 240Hz display; decent battery life; plenty of ports; quality webcam

Cons: Keyboard gets very hot while gaming; thermal throttles during long gaming sessions; tinny, distorted audio

See our full Acer Predator Triton Neo 16 review.

Apple MacBook Air 13 M4 | Apple M4 (10-core CPU/GPU) | 16GB RAM | 512GB SSD

Apple MacBook Air 13 M4 | Apple M4 (10-core CPU/GPU) | 16GB RAM | 512GB SSD

Score: ★★★★★

Pros: Affordably priced; excellent performance; over 15 hours of battery life; bright Liquid Retina display; fast and comfortable typing experience; unmatched webcam

Cons: Limited ports; upgrades can get expensive

See our full Apple MacBook Air 13 M4 review.

Asus ProArt PX13 | AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 | Nvidia RTX 4050 | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Asus ProArt PX13 | AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 | Nvidia RTX 4050 | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Score: ★★★★½

Pros: Impressive performance across the board; strong gaming performance; 2-in-1 design with a unique touchpad

Cons: Battery life could be better; bottom-firing speakers (easily muffled)

See our full Asus ProArt PX13 review.

Asus Zenbook S 16 | AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 | AMD Radeon 890M | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Asus Zenbook S 16 | AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 | AMD Radeon 890M | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Score: ★★★★

Pros: Unique design; decent OLED display; powerful performance; solid graphics; long battery life

Cons: Mediocre keyboard and touchpad; slow SSD

See our full Asus Zenbook S 16 review.

HP ZBook Studio 16 G11 | Intel Core Ultra 9 185H vPro | Nvidia RTX 3000 Ada Generation | 64GB RAM | 1TB SSD

HP ZBook Studio 16 G11 | Intel Core Ultra 9 185H vPro | Nvidia RTX 3000 Ada Generation | 64GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Score: ★★★★

Pros: Powerful Nvidia RTX Ada Generation graphics; strong general performance; bright, vivid display; high audio fidelity with impactful volume; many configuration options; plenty of ports

Cons: Expensive; battery life could be better; gets hot under pressure

See our full HP ZBook Studio 16 G11 review.

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i 16 Gen 9 | Intel Core Ultra 9 185H | Nvidia RTX 4050 | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i 16 Gen 9 | Intel Core Ultra 9 185H | Nvidia RTX 4050 | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Score: ★★★★½

Pros: Beautiful display; bouncy keyboard; strong overall performance; discrete graphics; decent battery life

Cons: Can’t configure RTX 4060 with Intel Core Ultra 7; touchpad too resistant; awful audio

See our full Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i 16 Gen 9 review.

LG Gram Pro 16 2-in-1 | Intel Core Ultra 7 155H | Intel Arc | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

LG Gram Pro 16 2-in-1 | Intel Core Ultra 7 155H | Intel Arc | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Score: ★★★★

Pros: Thin and light 2-in-1 design; vibrant 16-inch OLED screen; almost 11 hours of battery life; solid productivity performance

Cons: Expensive relative to performance; mushy trackpad

See our full LG Gram Pro 16 2-in-1 review.

MSI Creator A16 AI+ | AMD Ryzen AI 9 365 | Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

MSI Creator A16 AI+ | AMD Ryzen AI 9 365 | Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 | 32GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Score: ★★★½

Pros: Great CPU performance; discrete RTX 4060 GPU; sturdy chassis; satisfying keyboard; clear speakers

Cons: Overpriced for the specs; battery life could be better; poor trackpad; gets uncomfortably hot

See our full MSI Creator A16 AI+ review.

Samsung Galaxy Book 4 Edge | Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 | Qualcomm Adreno integrated graphics | 16GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Samsung Galaxy Book 4 Edge | Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 | Qualcomm Adreno integrated graphics | 16GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Score: ★★★½

Pros: Outstanding performance; attractive thin-and-light design; gorgeous and bright AMOLED touchscreen display; Copilot+ and Galaxy AI features

Cons: Disappointing battery life; gets too hot with heavy usage; grainy image from webcam

See our full Samsung Galaxy Book 4 Edge review.

Samsung Galaxy Book 5 Pro | Intel Core Ultra 7 256V | Intel Arc 140V integrated graphics | 16GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Samsung Galaxy Book 5 Pro | Intel Core Ultra 7 256V | Intel Arc 140V integrated graphics | 16GB RAM | 1TB SSD

Score: ★★★★

Pros: Bright and vivid touchscreen AMOLED display; over 12 hours of battery life; light for a 16-inch laptop; durable aluminum chassis; galaxy AI and Copilot+ AI features

Cons: Multitasking performance can’t match top competitors; limited key travel can impact typing; disappointing webcam, lacks facial recognition

See our full Samsung Galaxy Book 5 Pro review.

How to choose the best video editing laptop

The best video editing laptop for one person probably won't be the same as the next. Everyone has different budgets and different projects; editing short, ASMR videos in 1080p isn't the same as editing a full-length feature film in 4K. If you know what you want to do with a video editing laptop, that will help narrow down your choices.

Price

If you're a hobbyist, you can most likely get away with any laptop released in the last year or two for under $1,500. If you're a professional editor who needs a top-of-the-line laptop, it's even more important to have a budget in mind as these laptops can easily exceed $3,000. (We've seen them go as high as $8,000!)

Performance

In general, video editing leans heavily on the processor, so look for something with an Apple M3 Max or M4 (Pro or Max), AMD Ryzen AI 9, Intel Core Ultra, or Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite chip. If you need to step back a generation for the sake of affordability, that's fine too, though it may increase how long it takes to render or transcode your videos.

Graphics

If you need speed, look for a video editing laptop with a discrete graphics card (usually an Nvidia GeForce RTX 40-series, RTX A-series, or RTX Ada Generation). A lot of intensive video-editing tasks can be processed by the GPU instead of the CPU, which can save you a lot of time.

RAM and Storage

But whether a hobbyist or professional, do not skimp on RAM! 16GB is the absolute floor for hobbyists and 24GB for professionals, though we recommend at least 32GB for the latter.

You'll also want enough storage space for all your videos and editing programs, at least 1TB to 2TB. Not all of the best video editing laptops are configurable with more than 2TB of storage space, though, and if they are their price usually goes up drastically; an external SSD is a great, cost-saving option to get around that. (Or if you're feeling spicy, build your own cloud storage.)

FAQs

Q: Does video editing require a discrete GPU?

Not necessarily! You can do encoding, transcoding, and other common video editing tasks with just the processor and its integrated graphics. Qualcomm's Snapdragon X Elite chips are particularly great at this; they're built on ARM architecture, like Apple's M-series, which generally process tasks more efficiently.

But running the same resource-heavy tasks with a discrete GPU lets you take advantage of Hardware Acceleration, a common feature in popular image and video editing programs. Instead of relying on the CPU and RAM to do all the work, Hardware Acceleration uses the GPU to perform the same tasks much faster.

Most of today's integrated graphics (Intel Arc, AMD Radeon, and Apple's M-series) are powerful enough to cut down on the time it takes to run all sorts of video editing-related tasks — not as much as a discrete GPU, but usually a couple of minutes. MacBooks' integrated graphics are especially great for video editing, which is a big part of why there are two of 'em on our list.

Q: I want a discrete GPU; which one should I get?

It depends! If you want high frame rates and stunning graphics, then an RTX 4080 or RTX 4090 are your best bet. Those graphics cards make the most out of high refresh rate, OLED displays. If you are willing to compromise on one or the other, look for gaming laptops with either an RTX 4070, 4060, or 4050.

An RTX 4070 gaming laptop usually provides the best balance between frame rate and great graphics. Some are pricier than others, so do shop around to find something that fits your budget.

While these GPUs are primarily for gaming, they also work with Nvidia Studio Drivers, which provide more stability and reliability for content creation. Workstations usually come with Nvidia's RTX A-series or Ada Generation graphics cards, which are designed specfically for professional workstations and have better data integrity and stability. (They're more expensive, too!)

Q: How much RAM do I need for video editing?

It depends! With a discrete GPU (which has its own on-board video RAM) and Hardware Acceleration, you can get away with at least 16GB if you're not working on anything resource-intensive. But if you edit videos for a living, we recommend a minimum of 24GB — though if you have the budget for 32GB or more, that would be ideal.

If the video editing laptop you have your eye on has unified memory (RAM that is built into the CPU itself), you probably want to configure it with at least 32GB of RAM. The RAM in these laptops is shared between the CPU and integrated graphics; if you don't have enough total RAM, then the integrated graphics might not have enough resources to render large video or 3D files.

How we test video editing laptops

The best laptops for video editing are the ultimate high-performance laptops. We put each one through extensive benchmark testing — both synthetic and real-world — before they end up in the hands of our reviewers. We evaluate each aspect of the laptop, including its performance, battery life, display, speakers, and heat management.

In our benchmark testing, we use a Klein K10 colorimeter to detect the brightness and DCI-P3 color gamut of the laptop's display. For performance testing, we run the laptop through a gauntlet of benchmarks, including Geekbench 6, PugetBench for Adobe applications, and 3DMark professional graphics tests.

To determine real-world performance, we convert a 4K video to 1080p resolution and duplicate a 25GB file. Our real-world graphics test is Sid Meier's Civilization V: Gathering Storm benchmark at 1080p resolution and Medium graphics. We also run heat tests by playing a 15-minute full-screen video and measuring temperatures in different areas of the laptop.

For our battery test, we continuously web surfing over WiFi at 150 nits of brightness. For MacBooks and premium Windows 11 laptops, anything over 10 hours is a good result, whereas gaming laptops and workstations that can stay powered longer than 5 hours deserve praise.

Beyond the lab, our expert reviewers put laptops through their paces in real-world scenarios. By using the devices for their daily work, they gain a deep understanding of their performance and usability. This practical, hands-on approach, combined with lab testing, is how Laptop Mag delivers thorough and insightful reviews.

See this page on How We Test Laptops for more details on our benchmarking procedures.

Why trust Laptop Mag

Laptop Mag reviews over a hundred different laptops every year, from paperweight ultralights to everyday workhorses to lumbering gaming notebooks that scorch the frame rates of even the hottest AAA games. We're not just experts in the laptop field, as we go one step further by meticulously testing smartphones, tablets, headphones, PC accessories, software, and even the latest in gaming.

We are 100% independent and have decades of experience to help you buy with confidence. In fact, Laptop Mag has been testing and reviewing products for three decades, and we continue to deliver trustworthy reviews you can rely on.

Our experienced team of writers and editors scour the available information about the laptop and put it through its paces to determine which is best for you. But before they start, the testing team subjects each system to a rigorous regimen of synthetic and real-world tests to see how a system handles the type of work and games you’re most likely to throw at it.

Our editorial trustworthiness is enforced by one of the world's largest technology publishers, Future Publishing. As a company, we have unrivaled experience across every tech sector — and we're the group's specialist for all things mobile tech.

Joanna Nelius
Contributing Writer

Joanna Nelius is a contributing writer to Laptop Mag. She has reported on and reviewed laptops for The Verge, Gizmodo, PC Gamer, and USA Today.