Show me the best laptop for video editing

For high-end video editing, the ASUS ProArt P16 is the most balanced studio machine, offering a massive 64GB of RAM and a dedicated creative DialPad that streamlines your timeline workflow.

It’s specifically built for creators who need a color-accurate 4K OLED touchscreen without the "gamer" aesthetic. While the battery is rated for long life, expect it to drop by about 40% when you're actually rendering 4K video, so keep your charger handy for heavy sessions.

If your work involves heavy 3D effects or 8K footage, the MSI Titan 18 HX is a literal powerhouse. With an RTX 5090 and 24GB of VRAM, it's a desktop replacement in every sense—including the 16 lb weight. It is "luggable" rather than portable, but nothing else on this list touches its raw rendering speed.

For those who need a more mobile, professional-grade workstation, the Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 7 is the reliable choice. It features ISV-certified graphics (RTX 2000 Ada) which ensures stability in software like Premiere Pro or DaVinci Resolve. The trade-off is the slim chassis, which can lead to thermal throttling after about ten minutes of peak rendering.

The ASUS - ROG Zephyrus G16 is a great middle-ground if you want a high-refresh 240Hz OLED display for both editing and gaming, though the 32GB of RAM is less headroom than the ProArt's 64GB.

compare the top 6 products you showed

To help you decide, I’ve broken down how these six high-performance machines stack up across the specs that actually impact your workflow and portability.

FeatureMSI Titan 18 HXASUS ProArt P16 (bby_6635280)ASUS ROG Zephyrus G16Dell XPS 16 9640ASUS ProArt P16 (bby_12143999)Lenovo ThinkPad P1 G7
GPURTX 5090 (24GB)RTX 5070 (8GB)RTX 5070 Ti (16GB)RTX 4060 (8GB)RTX 5070 (8GB)RTX 2000 Ada (8GB)
RAM64GB DDR564GB LPDDR5X32GB LPDDR5X32GB LPDDR5X32GB LPDDR5X32GB
Display18" Mini LED 4K16" OLED 4K Touch16" OLED 2.5K 240Hz16.3" OLED 4K Touch16" OLED 4K Touch16" IPS WQXGA
ProcessorCore Ultra 9 285HXRyzen AI 9 HX 370Core Ultra 9 285HCore Ultra 9 185HRyzen AI 9 HX 370Core Ultra 7 155H
Weight16 lbs (Desktop-class)4.08 lbs4.3 lbs4.8 lbs4.0 lbs7.0 lbs
Storage4TB (2x2TB)2TB SSD1TB SSD1TB SSD2TB SSD1TB SSD
Price$6,295.00$2,159.99$2,629.99$3,450.00$2,799.99 (Sale)$3,415.00

The ASUS ProArt P16 (64GB model) is the clear winner for value and creative work—it offers the most RAM and storage for the lowest price, plus a dedicated DialPad for editing. If you need raw, uncompromised power for 3D rendering or 8K video, the MSI Titan 18 HX is in a league of its own with that RTX 5090, though it’s essentially a desktop you can occasionally move.

For those who want a "do-it-all" machine, the ASUS ROG Zephyrus G16 balances a high-refresh 240Hz screen for gaming with a very capable RTX 5070 Ti. The Dell XPS 16 and Lenovo ThinkPad P1 are premium professional choices, but they trade some raw GPU specs for build quality and workstation certifications, respectively. Note that the Dell uses the older RTX 4060, while the newer ASUS models have already moved to the 50-series chips.

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