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HP OmniBook X Flip 16 review: A great display wrapped in odd choices
  • Tech

HP OmniBook X Flip 16 review: A great display wrapped in odd choices

  • July 3, 2025
  • Roubens Andy King
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At a glance

Expert's Rating

Pros

  • Great display
  • Decent connectivity
  • Pleasing build

Cons

  • Leaves performance on the table
  • Doesn’t take great advantage of size
  • Big for tablet mode

Our Verdict

The HP OmniBook X Flip 16 is a large and somewhat pricey 2-in-1 that has a lot to like, but makes a few too many missteps to prove really favorable, especially when there are plenty of good alternatives.

Price When Reviewed

This value will show the geolocated pricing text for product undefined

Best Pricing Today

Price When Reviewed

$1,659

Best Prices Today: HP Omnibook X Flip 16


$1049.99

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The HP OmniBook X Flip 16 follows up on the brand’s 2024 re-launch of the OmniBook family, which coincided with the introduction of Windows Co-Pilot+ AI PCs. This new model comes alongside a 14-inch version as well, and both are offered in Intel and AMD flavors.

The Omnibook X Flip 16 sits near the high end of the stack, though it isn’t quite the top of the line. That’s left to the OmniBook Ultra. Still, the OmniBook X Flip 16 comes with a metal build, the latest processors, enough RAM for everyday use, and plenty more. This 2-in-1 has a lot to get excited about on paper, but as we’ll see, it can fail to deliver on expectations. It’s not a bad PC, but it doesn’t quite keep up with the Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro 360.

HP OmniBook X Flip 16: Specs and features

  • CPU: Intel Core Ultra 7 258V
  • Memory: 32GB LPDDR5X
  • Graphics/GPU: Intel Arc 140V
  • Display: 16-inch 2880×1800 OLED Touchscreen, Glossy
  • Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD
  • Webcam: 5MP
  • Connectivity: 1x Thunderbolt 4 with Power Delivery and DisplayPort 2.1, 1x USB-C 10Gbps with Power Delivery and DisplayPort 1.4, 2x USB-A 10Gbps, 1x HDMI 2.1, 1x 3.5mm combo audio
  • Networking: WiFi 7, Bluetooth 5.4
  • Biometrics: Windows Hello facial recognition
  • Battery capacity: 68 watt-hours
  • Dimensions: 14.02 x 9.67 x 0.61 inches
  • Weight: 4.17 pounds
  • MSRP: $1,659 as-tested ($1,099 base)

The HP OmniBook X Flip 16 comes in a variety of configurations, including both Intel- and AMD-powered setups. It has a base price of $899 for an AMD configuration with an AMD Ryzen AI 5 340, 16GB of memory, 512GB of storage, and a 1920×1200 IPS display. Upgrade options include an AMD Ryzen AI 7 350 CPU, 24 or 32GB of memory, 1 or 2TB of storage, and the 2880×1800 OLED display tested here. 

We tested an Intel configuration, and while it should be broadly similar to the AMD models, there are enough differences under the hood that you shouldn’t expect the same performance or battery life. The Intel configurations start at $1,099 and include an Intel Core Ultra 5 226V with 16GB of memory, 512GB of storage, and a 1920×1200 IPS display. The Intel models offer the same upgrade options as the AMD models, except they have a Core Ultra 7 256V with 16GB of memory or a 258V with 32GB of memory as options. Our test configuration includes the top CPU and memory specs, 1TB of storage, and the upgraded display. The MSRP is $1,659 as configured. 

The HP OmniBook X Flip 16 has a great display — a bright OLED panel with perfect blacks, full DCI-P3 color coverage, and smooth variable refresh rates up to 120Hz.

HP OmniBook X Flip 16: Design and build quality

HP Omnibook X Flip 16 touchscreen

IDG / Mark Knapp

HP doesn’t appear to be going for style points here. While my first encounter with an OmniBook last year came with a splash of color in the form of a funky keyboard, the OmniBook X Flip 16  is a drab affair. It has clean lines and a pleasing build, but it’s a bit lifeless.

The OmniBook X Flip 16  is a big laptop. It doesn’t quite push the boundaries that gaming laptops do, but in order to accommodate a 16-inch display and the hinge design necessary for tablet mode, it ends up quite sizable and a little heavy at 4.17 pounds. Thankfully, it’s still fairly slim. 

HP’s design makes for a sleek laptop with lots of subtly rounded edges and corners. This combines with the surprisingly gentle feel of the sandblasted, anodized aluminum chassis for a machine that feels like it considered user comfort some. 

The underside of the system is curious. Rather than have big, obvious rubber feet, the OmniBook X Flip 16  sits on long thin strips that you can almost barely tell protrude from the bottom because the underside has a gentle curve to it. This creates a very slim channel for air to pull in at the sides of the OmniBook X Flip 16  and make it to the intake fan. Though the base of the laptop has a huge grille stretching across it, most of that is plugged up. Only two small regions around the fan actually serve as air intakes.

The system’s heat is then exhausted through a vent tucked along the back of the base, just below the display. It’s possible HP has some air exhausting out the “speaker” grilles on the top deck, but I find that doubtful. 

Rather than situate speakers behind those massive grilles on the top deck, HP has positioned two speakers in little slots along the front lip of the laptop. This may not be ideal for audio in the laptop position, but it helps ensure the speakers are consistent in tent and tablet positions as well.

The display lid comes pretty close to flush with the lower deck, which can make it tricky to find a good grip for opening the lid, especially since HP removed the small cutaway seen on the last generation of OmniBook laptops to help open the display. Thankfully, the base of the laptop is heavy enough to stay put, making the OmniBook X Flip 16  much easier to get open than its similarly designed, smaller sibling, the OmniBook X Flip 14. The display hinge is a little wiggly after any movements, but stays put well enough once it comes to rest. It also holds open in the tablet position with the help of some magnets, so it doesn’t flop around. 

Above the display, the OmniBook X Flip 16  squeezes in a small webcam and a physical privacy shutter. Unfortunately, HP has continued to use a zebra-stripe pattern on the shutter, which has consistently proven hard to discern from a spot of glare. 

HP OmniBook X Flip 16: Keyboard, trackpad

HP Omnibook X Flip 16 keyboard

IDG / Mark Knapp

The HP OmniBook X Flip 16’s keyboard could be much better. On the one hand, the keys have a little bit of travel that makes for quick resetting, and they’re surprisingly well stabilized for how big they are. But the thing is, they’re very big and very flat, borrowing the regrettable design of Dell’s recent XPS laptops. This leaves little room between one key and its neighbors, and doesn’t provide much in the way of tactile guidance. I find my fingers are frequently roaming away from the center of keys, hitting edges (and neighbors), and ending up with typos I would have much more easily avoided with smaller keycaps and a bit of contour to the keys.

While I’m not surprised to see no number pad on this style of laptop, it is nevertheless disappointing to see no efforts to use all the extra space available to this size of laptop. It still has cramped arrow keys. It still crams the Delete key right next to the power button — a nuisance for writers — though at least the white backlighting clearly illuminates the keycap legends.

The trackpad on the OmniBook X Flip 16  stretches a good way. It’s not nearly as large as it could be with the space available to it, but it provides a sizable, central space to mouse around and perform multi-finger gestures with ease. It has a shallow physical click with a gentle tactility that’s nice to use. 

HP OmniBook X Flip 16: Display, audio

HP Omnibook X Flip 16 display

IDG / Mark Knapp

The HP OmniBook X Flip 16 has a great display. It features a bright OLED panel that can reach 406.9 nits right next to perfect black pixels, and it covers 100 percent of the DCI-P3 color space. The display even had a color accurate maximum dE1976 of 2.37. Top all that off with support for variable refresh rates from 48Hz to 120Hz, and you’ve got a solid screen. It is glossy, though, so it can struggle with glare in certain conditions. 

The display also works as a touchscreen for easy control and tablet use. On top of that, the OmniBook X Flip 16  comes with a stylus for fine, pressure-sensitive control that proves responsive and accurate. Because of the size of the display, doodling on certain areas without also getting your hand on the screen can be tricky, and I’ve found touch rejection a bit troublesome. When not in use, the stylus can magnetically latch onto the right side of the laptop, though it’s not a firm enough connection that I’d rely on it while storing and transporting the laptop. 

The speakers on the OmniBook X Flip 16  pack a punch, pumping out plenty of volume for a small room. They get a little harsh in the mids at max volume, though. Despite the laptop’s size, it doesn’t benefit from any extra-bassy speaker drivers, and therefore comes up lacking in that area. The bass isn’t completely absent, but it’s mellow enough that music doesn’t quite feel full and the most explosive moments of movies will probably fall flat. There’s a decent bit of stereo, though thanks to the wider spacing of the speakers. It is a bit awkward that HP has two huge grilles on either side of the keyboard that look like they’d house speakers, but they don’t. 

HP OmniBook X Flip 16: Webcam, microphone, biometrics

HP Omnibook X Flip 16 webcam

IDG / Mark Knapp

The webcam on the HP OmniBook X Flip 16 captures a nice and sharp picture while also offering support for facial recognition. It can get a little awkward as the camera shifts exposure and white balance levels while recording, seeing big shifts in the color and brightness of parts of the shot, but it still is pretty good for a built-in camera. 

The mics paired with the camera also do their job well. They cancelled out the sound of a nearby fan running loudly, and managed to capture my voice loud and clear in the process. They struggled a bit more to cancel out clapping effectively. While they did erase the sound of the claps, they also erased a bit of my voice and made it sound compressed in the process. This was surprising after the laptop’s smaller sibling, the HP OmniBook X Flip 14, performed almost flawlessly in the same test. 

The OmniBook X Flip 16  also supports facial recognition for quick and easy sign-in, though Microsoft recently limited this system’s ability to perform in the dark, and the OmniBook X Flip 16  was affected. Thankfully it still works in dim environments. 

HP OmniBook X Flip 16: Connectivity

HP Omnibook X Flip 16 ports

IDG / Mark Knapp

You’ll get respectable connectivity from the HP OmniBook X Flip 16 , but like many of its contemporaries, it fails to take full advantage of its size. The left side houses a USB-A port, two USB-C ports, an HDMI 2.1 port. The right side, despite having loads of space, only includes a 3.5mm audio jack and a USB-A port. Both USB-A ports offer 10Gbps speeds, which is nice to see. But only one of the USB-C ports gets the Thunderbolt 4 treatment. The other is just another 10Gbps port, though thankfully both USB-C ports support DisplayPort output and charging. 

For wireless connections, you get Wi-Fi 7 through an Intel wireless adapter and Bluetooth 5.4. In my testing, both have proven stable and quick to connect. 

HP OmniBook X Flip 16: Performance

The HP OmniBook X Flip 16 isn’t kitted out to be a performance monster, but it still offers some strong components. At $1,659, its priced like plenty of other machines that also offer strong components, though, and the premium cost of at 2-in-1 actually makes it look a bit worse. 

The Acer Swift Go 16 brings along a more powerful processor and an equal amount of storage and RAM for far less at $1,149, but it’s not a 2-in-1. The Lenovo Yoga 7i 2-in-1 16ILL10 has a slightly weaker processor and half the RAM but costs much less at $1,199. Meanwhile, Samsung offers both a 2-in-1 and a traditional version of its Galaxy Book5 Pro. The normal one costs $1,649 and has that same weaker processor found in the Lenovo system alongside just 16GB of memory. Meanwhile, the 2-in-1 version we tested includes the same CPU as and as much memory and RAM as the OmniBook X Flip 16.

To make matters a little tricky, the Galaxy Book5 Pro 360 we tested isn’t one Samsung actually sells — rather it has a $1,699 model (currently $1,449) with the same internals as its normal Galaxy Book5 Pro. Almost all of these systems also have a 2880×1800 OLED display except Lenovo’s.

IDG / Mark Knapp

Even though the OmniBook X Flip 16  is sitting near the top of this group price-wise, it sits at the bottom of the pack in the holistic performance test, PCMark 10. This tests a range of activities, including browsing, opening apps, editing spreadsheets, manipulating photo and video, and having video calls. All of the systems perform great, readily keeping up with these kinds of common tasks, but HP just doesn’t quite do as much. Sometimes, it can just be a slightly slower SSD that will hold a system back against competitors with similar specifications, but the OmniBook X Flip 16  lagged behind across many of the sub-tests.

IDG / Mark Knapp

Cinebench helps us see one of the culprits of the OmniBook X Flip 16 ’s lower performance in PCMark. Cinebench pushes focused on the CPU specifically. Unsurprisingly, the Acer Swift Go 16 has a strong lead across these tests thanks to its more potent CPU. But the OmniBook X Flip 16  generally showed weaker single-core performance than its other competitors across Cinebench R15, R20, R23, and R24. For multi-core performance, it had a better time leading the Lenovo system and its weaker CPU, but it consistently tailed the two Samsung machines even though one of them also had the same weaker CPU as the Lenovo. That remained consistent even in Cinebench R24, which runs the test longer to show the impacts of thermal throttling more. 

IDG / Mark Knapp

Our Handbrake test also pushes the CPU hard and will show how well the system can handle heat to perform the task quickly. After seeing the Cinebench results, it’s clear the OmniBook X Flip 16 can at least make better use of its CPU in longer tasks than the Lenovo Yoga 7i 2-in-1—likely thanks to its more potent CPU and better cooling. But again, both Samsung systems perform noticeably better, suggesting that either their power modes deliver more juice or their cooling allows for higher sustained speeds.

IDG / Mark Knapp

Since all five systems are running on some form of Intel integrated graphics, it’s not surprising to see them all offering largely similar performance. But yet again, the OmniBook X Flip 16  lags behind. Lenovo has roughly 5 percent better performance in the 3DMark gaming benchmark Time Spy, and the Samsung systems step it up with roughly 10 percent better performance. It’s a similar story for 3DMark’s Night Raid, except the differences are even further in favor of the other systems. 

This all puts the OmniBook X Flip 16  into a bad spot. HP simply doesn’t seem to have done enough to make sure its system is running as well as it could. Heat could be better managed, and a custom performance profile might have let the CPU run better than it is here. Considering how often the OmniBook X Flip 16  is getting shown up by a machine with a lower-tier CPU (the Intel Core Ultra 7 256V), it’s clear optimization and settings can matter as much or more than system specifications. 

HP OmniBook X Flip 16: Battery life

The HP OmniBook X Flip 16 takes some advantage of its size to squeeze in a sizable battery with a 68 watt-hour pack, though it could have gone bigger still. It manages to use that battery relatively efficiently. In our 4K local video playback test, which runs the laptop in airplane mode with the screen at 250-260 nits, the OmniBook X Flip 16  managed to run for almost 18 hours. That’s fairly impressive for a big, sharp display.

IDG / Mark Knapp

That battery longevity, while good, still isn’t mind blowing. It is far better than some, like the Acer Swift Go 16 2025. But Lenovo’s competing model went even further, and both were leagues behind either of Samsung’s Galaxy Book5 Pro models. Both Samsung laptops topped 23 hours of battery life, despite featuring hardware quite similar to the OmniBook X Flip 16. Those are significant leads that can’t be chalked up to slightly larger batteries alone. What’s more surprising is that both Samsung systems managed this while also outperforming the OmniBook X Flip 16 in nearly every performance test.

In everyday use, the OmniBook X Flip 16  also lasts quite a while, generally making it through my workdays without issue. 

HP OmniBook X Flip 16: Conclusion

The HP OmniBook X Flip 16 is a bit hit and a bit miss, almost in equal measure. On the one hand, it feels well built and has a nice, albeit plain look to it. It has a big, gorgeous display as well. But it also makes confusing choices like having huge grilles that do almost nothing. Its keyboard prioritizes form over function. And a 16-inch tablet over four pounds probably won’t be practical for most people, especially without reliable palm rejection. 

Then there’s the performance. It simply doesn’t take full advantage of the hardware, in many cases getting outperformed by lower-tier hardware. Perhaps it would have worked better had HP used all of its grilles to get more airflow and heat dissipation. But it didn’t. And in spite of that, the OmniBook X Flip 16 is on the expensive side. Aside from the fact that Samsung’s Galaxy Book5 Pro 360 doesn’t actually come in the configuration we tested, I can see little reason to choose the OmniBook X Flip 16 over it. Even though the Samsung has less memory and a lower-tier processor, I’d expect it to perform close to its non-flipping sibling, which as we saw in our benchmarks also thoroughly beat up on the OmniBook X Flip 16. 

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