BUYING GUIDE · 2026

How to Choose a Cheap Laptop.

Buying a cheap laptop is easy to get wrong — a bad one feels slow within months. This guide shows you exactly what to look for, why a refurbished business laptop beats a cheap new one at the same price, and which budget laptops are best for students, home and work.

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The one rule of cheap laptops

If you remember nothing else: at any budget, a refurbished business laptop beats a cheap new one. A new laptop at $400 typically means a slow Celeron or Pentium chip, 4GB of RAM and sluggish eMMC storage. The same $400 buys a refurbished ex-corporate Dell, HP or Lenovo with a real Intel Core i5, 8–16GB RAM and a fast SSD — a machine that originally sold for $1,500 or more and is built to keep going for years. So the smartest cheap laptop isn’t the cheapest new one — it’s a well-chosen refurbished one. Here’s how to pick it.

THE 5 CHECKS

What to look for in a cheap laptop.

Get these five right and you can’t go far wrong.

1. Processor: i5 or better

Avoid Celeron and Pentium. A genuine Intel Core i5 (or i7) is the single biggest factor in how fast a cheap laptop feels.

2. RAM: 8GB minimum

4GB is painful in 2026. 8GB handles everyday multitasking; 16GB is the comfortable sweet spot.

3. Storage: SSD, never HDD

An SSD is the upgrade you feel most. Never buy a cheap laptop with a hard drive or eMMC — 256GB SSD or more.

4. Brand: buy business

Ex-corporate Dell Latitude, HP EliteBook/ProBook and Lenovo ThinkPad are built far tougher than budget consumer models.

5. Warranty & grade

Insist on a real warranty. Cheaper grades (Good/Acceptable) save money with the same performance.

WHAT YOUR BUDGET BUYS

How much should you spend?

Refurbished pricing, by what you actually get.

Budget Typical spec Best for
Under $300 i5, 8GB, 256GB SSD Browsing, email, first/spare laptop
$300–$500 i5, 8–16GB, 256–512GB SSD Students, home, everyday work — the sweet spot
$500–$750 i7, 16GB, 512GB SSD Power users, business, heavier multitasking

For most people, the $300–$500 bracket is the value sweet spot — a genuine i5 business laptop with an SSD that handles everything an everyday user needs.

BEST PICKS

The best cheap laptop for you.

Our pick by who’s buying.

Best for students

An i5 with 8GB and a 256GB SSD around $300–$450 — light, fast and affordable. See student laptops.

Best for home

Any i5 Dell, HP or Lenovo with an SSD — reliable for email, browsing, banking and streaming.

Best for work

An i7 with 16GB in the $500–$750 range — a proper business laptop for multitasking, for less.

Best value overall

A Good or Acceptable grade i5 — the lowest price for the same performance. The smart bargain hunter’s pick.

CHEAP vs CHEAP

$400 new vs $400 refurbished

At ~$400 Cheap NEW Refurbished
CPU Celeron / Pentium Core i5
RAM 4GB 8–16GB
Storage eMMC (slow) SSD (fast)
Lasts ~1 year before it drags Years

Still deciding between refurbished and new overall? Read refurbished vs new.

FROM $250 · TESTED · WARRANTED

Ready to pick your cheap laptop?

You know what to look for — now see the laptops. Genuine i5/i7 machines with SSD and a 12-month warranty, from $250.

Shop cheap laptops

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FAQ

Budget laptop questions, answered.

What is the best budget laptop in Australia?
The best value budget laptop is a refurbished ex-corporate Dell, HP or Lenovo with an Intel i5, 8–16GB RAM and an SSD, around $300–$500. It outperforms any new laptop at the same price and lasts far longer. Browse current picks on cheap laptops.
How much should I spend on a cheap laptop?
$300–$500 is the sweet spot for refurbished — enough for a genuine i5 with an SSD that handles everyday work and study. Under $300 still gets a capable machine; $500–$750 buys i7 power for heavier use.
What specs do I need in a cheap laptop?
As a minimum: an Intel Core i5, 8GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD. Avoid Celeron/Pentium chips, 4GB RAM and eMMC or hard-drive storage — they’re what make a cheap laptop feel slow.
Is a refurbished laptop better than a cheap new one?
At the same price, yes — clearly. A refurbished business laptop gives you an i5, more RAM and an SSD where a cheap new one gives you a Celeron, 4GB and slow storage. It’s faster, tougher and lasts longer.
What’s the best cheap laptop for a student?
A light i5 with 8GB RAM and a 256GB SSD around $300–$450 — enough for assignments, research and classes all day. See student laptops.
Do cheap laptops come with a warranty?
They should — never buy one without. Every laptop we sell, at any price, comes with a 12-month warranty and we pay shipping both ways on claims.

LAST UPDATED · JUN 2026 · CLS BUYING GUIDE

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