Amazon has slashed the price of HP’s 16-inch OmniBook 5 Copilot+ PC to $809.99, marking a rare discount on a full-size OLED laptop with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X chip. The deal, spotted by Windows Central on July 14, brings the laptop down from its typical $1,100 list price, but buyers should weigh its Arm-based constraints and non-upgradeable memory before clicking “add to cart.”

What’s Included in the $809.99 Package

The specific configuration on sale is model 16-fb0299nr, which packs an eight-core Snapdragon X X1-26-100 processor, 16GB of soldered LPDDR5x RAM, a 512GB NVMe SSD, and a 16-inch 1920x1200 OLED display. It runs Windows 11 Home and carries the Copilot+ PC badge, meaning its NPU hits 45 TOPS for local AI acceleration. The display has a 16:10 aspect ratio, 300 nits brightness, and low-blue-light certification. HP rates the battery for up to 34 hours and 45 minutes of video playback — a lab-condition best-case, not a mixed-use promise.

The chassis is thin and light for a 16-inch laptop, with a clean silver finish. Connectivity leans heavily on USB-C ports; there’s no USB-A without a dongle, and video output relies on DisplayPort over USB-C or an HDMI adapter. Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3 are standard. The keyboard is full-size with a number pad, and the touchpad is generously sized. A 1080p IR camera supports Windows Hello facial recognition.

Who This Laptop Is For — and Who Should Pass

This OmniBook 5 is a purpose-built productivity machine. For students, remote workers, and anyone who spends most of their day in a browser, Office apps, video calls, and streaming media, the combination of a large OLED screen, all-day battery life, and silent operation hits a sweet spot. The 16-inch panel provides enough real estate for side-by-side document editing without an external monitor.

But it’s not a workstation or a gaming rig. The integrated Adreno GPU handles display duties but won’t satisfy even casual gaming beyond low-demand titles, and many games remain incompatible with Windows on Arm. Similarly, creative pros running Adobe Premiere, heavy 3D modeling, or local AI training will find the soldered 16GB RAM and ARM architecture limiting. IT departments considering fleet purchases should test all line-of-business apps, VPN clients, and endpoint security tools, as x64 emulation still stumbles with some corner cases.

Snapdragon X and Windows on Arm: The Compatibility Reality

Windows 11 on Snapdragon X has come a long way. Microsoft’s emulation layer now handles most x86 and x64 applications transparently, and many key apps — Chrome, Edge, Zoom, Spotify, Affinity Photo, and the Office suite — have native ARM64 versions. That means everyday users likely won’t notice a difference.

However, the devil is in the peripherals and older software. Printer drivers, scanner utilities, custom enterprise applications, and hardware that relies on kernel-level drivers (some VPNs, anti-cheat software, specialized audio interfaces) may not work at all. Before buying, check with your IT department or search online forums for compatibility reports specific to your critical tools. For home users, the biggest frustration might be trying to run a favorite old game or a niche productivity tool only to find it refuses to launch.

Decoding the Battery Life Claims

HP’s “up to 34 hours and 45 minutes” number comes from local video playback at low brightness with Wi-Fi off — a standardized test that doesn’t reflect real-world usage. In mixed productivity, you should expect somewhere around 15–20 hours based on similar Snapdragon X laptops we’ve tested. That’s still excellent, easily covering a full workday and an evening of Netflix. But if you’re pushing the NPU with AI effects in video calls or keeping the screen at maximum brightness, the battery will drain faster. For most buyers, the battery life will be a key strength, just don’t expect to squeeze 34 hours out of it while multitasking.

Upgradeability and Longevity

HP soldered the RAM, so you’re stuck with 16GB forever. For current workflows, that’s fine, but as Windows and apps grow hungrier over the next 3–5 years, it could become a constraint. The SSD is accessible and replaceable (M.2 NVMe), allowing you to expand storage to 2TB if needed. Just be aware that opening the chassis may void the warranty — check HP’s policy before you start. If you’re the type who likes to upgrade components over time, this laptop’s sealed design will frustrate you.

Before You Buy: Practical Steps

  1. Verify the price: Amazon’s discounts can vanish without notice. The $809.99 price was live as of July 14, but confirm the listing shows that number and that Amazon itself (not a third-party seller) is fulfilling the order.
  2. Test app compatibility: If you rely on specific software, search “[app name] Windows on Arm compatibility” or check sites like Windows on Arm Ready. For corporate users, IT teams should run a pilot.
  3. Inspect the return policy: Amazon typically offers 30-day returns, giving you a safety net to ensure your software and peripherals work.
  4. Consider extended warranty: With soldered RAM, any motherboard failure down the line could be catastrophic. A protection plan might be worth considering.
  5. Budget for accessories: There’s no USB-A port without a dongle; the laptop leans on USB-C, so budget for a hub if you need legacy connections.

How This Deal Stacks Up

Full-size OLED laptops rarely dip below $900, and adding Copilot+ PC capabilities makes the $809.99 price aggressive. Comparable 16-inch laptops with OLED screens — even Arm-based ones — often sit above $1,000. The closest rivals, like Samsung’s Galaxy Book4 Edge 16 or Lenovo’s Yoga Slim 7x, typically cost several hundred dollars more. For a home office or school machine, this is one of the better values in the current Windows ecosystem, as long as you accept its Arm-based limitations.

Outlook: What’s Next for Copilot+ Deals

This isn’t likely the last discount we’ll see on Snapdragon X laptops. With newer chips on the horizon and back-to-school season ramping up, prices may dip further or appear on other models. However, the combination of a 16-inch OLED, solid build, and sub-$900 pricing sets a benchmark. If you don’t need the laptop immediately, watching for similar deals on models with user-upgradeable RAM or a brighter display might pay off — but for many, the OmniBook 5 at this price is an excellent buy right now.