HP EliteBook X G2: AI-Powered Laptops Redefine Portable Performance

HP’s elitebook X ⁤G2 Laptops Put Serious AI Power In Shockingly Light Designs

HP came to CES 2026 ​with a clear message: business laptops don’t have ‌to be heavy, boring, or locked into a single platform anymore. The new elitebook X G2 lineup leans hard into⁤ on-device AI, while giving buyers something they rarely get in this ⁢segment‌ – real choice.

Rather of pushing one processor family, HP is offering the EliteBook ⁢X G2 ‌with AMD, Intel, or Qualcomm Snapdragon silicon, ⁢plus both ⁣traditional clamshell and convertible designs. It’s a flexible approach that fits ⁣how modern work actually looks, especially for people who⁤ live ⁢on their laptops all day.

That versatility matters more than ever as AI workloads move off the cloud and onto the device ⁤itself.

One ​lineup, three silicon‌ paths

At the‌ top sits ⁤the EliteBook X G2q, powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 Plus​ or X2 Elite chips. The flagship configuration pushes up to 85 TOPS of NPU performance, making it one of the moast capable Copilot+ PCs announced so far. HP pairs that silicon with a ​14-inch 3K OLED display (optional 120Hz ‌VRR), up to 64GB of ⁤LPDDR5X ‍RAM, and as much as ‍2TB of PCIe storage.

For users who prefer x86 compatibility,HP isn’t ‌forcing a compromise.

The EliteBook ‌X G2i runs on Intel’s Core Ultra Series 3 processors, delivering up to 50 TOPS of AI performance while keeping ‌weight impressively low. Entry-level configurations come in under 1 kilogram, ⁢which is remarkable for a full-featured business laptop with this kind of performance headroom. Display, memory, and storage options mirror ‌the Snapdragon‌ model, keeping ⁢the decision focused on platform preference rather⁤ than feature trade-offs.

Than ther’s the EliteBook X G2a, built around AMD’s Ryzen AI 9 HX‌ Pro 470. With up to 55 TOPS of NPU performance, it lands squarely between Intel and Qualcomm in raw AI capability, while retaining AMD’s strengths in sustained performance and⁣ compatibility. Again,HP keeps the rest of‍ the configuration ​consistent across the lineup,which simplifies‍ buying decisions.

convertible‌ options without compromise

HP is also expanding​ the ⁤lineup with the EliteBook X Flip G2i, a convertible ‍version of the Intel model.⁢ The Flip variant supports laptop, tent, stand, and tablet modes, ⁤with a ⁤detachable display that turns the device into a standalone ​tablet when needed.

What stands out is ⁢that the Flip doesn’t ⁤feel like ⁤an ​afterthought. Specifications⁢ remain ⁤in ⁤line with the‌ standard G2i, which means users don’t ‍have to give up performance just to gain flexibility. That’s still ⁢not a given in enterprise hardware.

Built for long days,⁤ not just demos

On paper, the EliteBook X G2 series checks all the ⁤expected⁣ enterprise boxes: Windows 11 Pro, Copilot+ features, enterprise-grade security,⁣ and promised all-day battery life. But what matters more is whether these machines can actually​ handle sustained‍ work.

This is were HP has quietly earned⁤ some credibility.

I’ve ‌been using an HP notebook as my primary work ‌machine for about a year and a half, and it’s been‍ pushed hard – 12+ hour workdays, constant multitasking, heavy ⁣browser workloads, writing, research, and background apps running nonstop. What still surprises me is how well such a compact machine holds up ⁤under that kind of pressure.

Thermals stay under control, performance doesn’t collapse after a few hours, and the system ‍hasn’t developed the sluggishness that often creeps into thin-and-light laptops⁢ over time. That ​real-world endurance ‍is easy to ⁢overlook at‌ events like CES, but ⁣it’s exactly what makes designs like the EliteBook X G2 series compelling.‍ These‍ aren’t just thin for the sake of marketing slides; they’re built to survive long, repetitive workdays.

A‌ smarter direction for business laptops

The EliteBook⁢ X G2 lineup feels like a shift away from the old “one-size-fits-all” enterprise laptop strategy. Rather of forcing everyone into the same platform, HP is ⁣acknowledging that different users value different things – ARM⁤ efficiency, Intel compatibility, or AMD performance balance – and letting them choose ​without penalty.

Availability is staggered. HP says ⁢the Intel-powered EliteBook X G2i and Flip G2i ⁢should arrive in select configurations starting February 2026, while the AMD G2a and Snapdragon G2q models are expected later⁣ in the spring. Pricing⁣ hasn’t been announced yet.

HP also used CES to tease other hardware, including the ‍new Omnibook Ultra 14 and its unusual keyboard PC, but the ⁢EliteBook X G2 series is‌ the clearest signal of where HP thinks ‍business laptops are headed.

If ‌these machines deliver in real-world⁤ use the way HP’s recent notebooks have, this lineup could set a⁤ new baseline for what “lightweight business laptop”‍ actually means in the AI era.

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