Best Laptops Under £500 (2026): Real Picks That Are Actually Worth Buying

Five hundred pounds does not stretch as far as it did a year ago. Memory and SSD prices climbed through 2026, so laptops in this bracket now ship with slightly tighter specs than they used to, and the shelves are full of cheap machines that look like a bargain and simply are not.
The good news is that you can still buy a genuinely good laptop for under £500 if you know where the value hides. We sell these laptops every week, so below are the ones actually worth your money right now, with live prices, plus the honest truth about what £500 will and will not get you in 2026.
Last updated: June 2026 · Hardvance hardware team
Quick verdict: the best value under £500 in 2026 is either a new Windows laptop with 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD, a professionally refurbished business laptop for more build quality per pound, or a Chromebook if your work lives in a browser. Avoid 8GB models you cannot upgrade, and do not expect a gaming laptop or a premium ultrabook at this price.
What £500 actually buys you in 2026
Here is the honest picture. With memory and storage prices high this year, £500 today buys a solid everyday laptop rather than a powerhouse. That is absolutely fine for what most people actually do: browsing, Office, email, video calls, streaming, coursework and light photo work.
At this price you have three smart routes:
- A new 16GB Windows laptop. The sensible default, with enough memory and storage to stay quick for years.
- A refurbished business laptop. The value play. A three-year-old HP EliteBook or Dell Latitude gives you a metal chassis and 16GB for the same money as a new plastic one.
- A Chromebook. The cheapest route if your work is mostly a browser and Google or Office online.
What you cannot get for £500 is a gaming laptop worth owning, a 4K screen or a new MacBook. If you need one of those, the honest answer is to save a little longer. Buying for a course? Our guide to the best laptops for students matches specs to what you study.
How to spend £500 well (and what to compromise on)
The trick at this price is to spend on the things you cannot change later, and compromise on the things that do not matter day to day.
| Spend on | Compromise on |
|---|---|
| 16GB RAM (usually soldered, so you cannot add more later) | Screen: Full HD is perfectly sharp, skip 4K |
| A 512GB SSD (256GB fills within a term) | Build: a tidy plastic body is fine if the hinge is solid |
| An SSD, never a mechanical hard drive | Processor generation: last year’s Core i5 is still excellent |
| Battery you can trust for 8 or more hours | A dedicated graphics card: you do not need one |
Get the first column right and a £500 laptop will still feel quick in three years. Get it wrong, usually by buying 8GB to save £40, and you will feel it every single day.

Should you buy refurbished under £500?
For a lot of buyers, yes, and it is the single best-value tip in this guide. A professionally refurbished business laptop, the kind that used to sit on an office desk, gives you a proper aluminium build, a great keyboard and 16GB of RAM for around £500. A brand-new laptop at the same price is almost always plastic with less memory.
The trade-off is that you are buying last-generation hardware, and the battery may not be box-fresh. For everyday work it is still a smarter buy than a new budget machine. Look for one that is graded, fully tested and sold with a warranty, which all of ours are. Browse our refurbished laptops.
The best laptops under £500 right now
Every laptop here is in stock and priced live, so you always see today’s figure. They run roughly from the best all-rounder to the most specialised.
Best overall under £500: ASUS Vivobook 15 (Core i5, 16GB, 512GB)
If you want one laptop that simply gets everything right at this price, this is it. A Core i5, a full 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD in a 15.6in Full HD body, for £472.50 inc VAT. That is the exact specification we tell most people to aim for, and getting all of it under £500 is about as good as this price gets. The plastic build is the only real compromise.
Best value 16GB pick: Lenovo IdeaPad 1 (Ryzen 5, 16GB, 512GB)
Lenovo IdeaPad 1 15AMN7 15.6″ FHD Laptop AMD Ryzen 5 7520U 16GB 512GB SSD Wi-Fi 6 Win 11 S UK English Grey
In stock
£460.71 inc VAT- Cloud Grey clamshell laptop with 15.6-inch Full HD IPS anti-glare display and 250 nits brightness
- AMD Ryzen 5 7520U processor (4-core, up to 4.3 GHz) with integrated AMD Radeon 610M graphics
- 16 GB LPDDR5-SDRAM on-board memory and 512 GB M.2 PCIe SSD storage
- Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) and Bluetooth 5.1 connectivity with 1x USB-C, 1x USB-A, 1x USB 2.0 and HDMI 1.4b
- HD 720p camera with privacy shutter and Dolby Audio dual 1.5 W speakers with Smart Noise Cancelling
- Windows 11 Home in S mode, 42 Wh battery with fast charging up to 9.86 hours and 17.35 hours video playback
- Lightweight 1.58 kg design at 17.9 mm thickness with UK English keyboard and numeric keypad
Almost identical value from the other camp. The Ryzen 5 IdeaPad 1 pairs 16GB of RAM with a 512GB SSD for £460.71 inc VAT, and AMD’s chip is a strong everyday performer. Choose this or the Vivobook on whichever is cheaper on the day, because you will not go wrong with either.
Best refurbished value: HP EliteBook 850 G7 (Core i5, 16GB)
HP EliteBook 850 G7 Refurbished Laptop, 15.6″ FHD, Intel Core i5-10th Gen, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, Windows 11 Pro
In stock
£444.33 inc VAT- Premium Refurbished HP EliteBook 850 G7 laptop with BSI Kitemark quality assurance
- Intel Core i5 10th Gen processor for reliable business performance
- 15.6-inch Full HD 1080p Grade A screen with scratch-free finish
- 16GB RAM and 256GB SSD for fast multitasking and storage
- Windows 11 Pro operating system with full software and hardware keys
- Comprehensive connectivity including USB-C, Thunderbolt, HDMI and headphone jack
- 1-year return-to-base warranty and carbon-neutral certified refurbishment
The most laptop you can get for the money. This refurbished EliteBook brings a 15.6in Full HD screen, a Core i5, 16GB of RAM and a proper aluminium chassis, for £444.33 inc VAT, with Windows 11 Pro and a warranty. It is last-generation, but it is built to a standard no new £500 laptop can match.
Best compact refurbished: Dell Latitude 5430 (Core i5, 16GB, 14in)
DELL Latitude 5430 i5 Laptop, 14″ FHD, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, Win 11 Pro
In stock
£444.53 inc VAT- BS8887-240 British Standard Kitemark certified for quality and reliability
- 14″ FHD 1080p display with Grade A screen refurbishment
- Intel Core i5 12th Gen processor with 16GB RAM and 256GB SSD
- Windows 11 Pro with comprehensive connectivity including 2x Thunderbolt 4 ports
- Premium refurbished with 1-year return to base warranty
If you want the refurbished route in a smaller, lighter 14in body, the Latitude 5430 is the one. A 12th-gen Core i5, 16GB of RAM and a business-grade build, for £444.53 inc VAT. Ideal if you carry your laptop around all day and want durability without the bulk of a 15in machine.
Best Chromebook under £500: ASUS Chromebook CX1405
If your day is browsing, Google Docs, Office online and video calls, a Chromebook does it for less. The ASUS CX1405 has a 14in Full HD screen and all-day battery, for £389.45 inc VAT, and ChromeOS stays fast and secure. It cannot run full Windows software, so check your needs first. Our Chromebook guide explains exactly who it suits.
Cheapest worth buying: HP 15-fc (Ryzen 3)
HP 15-fc0045na Ryzen 3 7320U 15.6″ FHD Laptop
In stock
£382.63 inc VAT- 15.6″ Full HD anti-glare display with 85% screen-to-body ratio
- AMD Ryzen 3 7320U processor with 4 cores and 8 threads
- 8 GB LPDDR5-SDRAM on-board memory, 256 GB PCIe SSD storage
- AMD Radeon Graphics with FreeSync support
- Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) and Bluetooth 5.4 connectivity
- Ocean-bound plastic in speaker enclosures and recycled keycaps
- 10.5 hours battery life with fast charging capability
- Windows 11 Home with HP security tools and privacy shutter
When the budget will not stretch to 16GB, this is the floor we are comfortable recommending. The HP 15-fc runs Windows 11 smoothly for essays, browsing and video calls on a Ryzen 3 and an SSD, for £382.63 inc VAT. It has 8GB, so keep it to lighter tasks, but it is a real, reliable laptop rather than a false economy.

Browse more laptops under £500
Live from our catalogue, sorted by price. The first row is our full laptop range from the cheapest up; the second is refurbished, where the value is strongest right now.
Refurbished laptops (more build quality for your money):
What you should not expect under £500
A quick reality check, so nothing disappoints you. Under £500 you will not get a gaming laptop that plays modern titles well, a 4K or OLED screen, a new MacBook, or a thin metal ultrabook with all-day battery and 32GB of RAM. Those all start higher up. If a £500 listing seems to promise every one of those, be suspicious, because it usually means old stock, tiny storage, or 8GB of RAM hidden in the small print.
Pro tip: the fastest way to waste £500 is to buy 8GB to save a few pounds. On most laptops the RAM is soldered, so 8GB stays 8GB for the life of the machine. Spend the extra for 16GB, or buy refurbished to get 16GB and a better build for the same money.
Laptops under £500: FAQs
Our top pick is the ASUS Vivobook 15 with a Core i5, 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD. The Lenovo IdeaPad 1 with a Ryzen 5 is an equally strong alternative, and a refurbished HP EliteBook gives you the best build quality for the money.
For light use, browsing, essays and a Chromebook, it is fine. For anything heavier it will feel slow, and because the RAM is usually soldered you cannot add more later. For around £40 to £80 more you can get 16GB, which is well worth it on a laptop you want to keep for years.
Refurbished usually wins on value. A refurbished business laptop gives you a metal build and 16GB of RAM for the same price as a new plastic one. Buy new if you want the freshest battery and longest warranty, but a graded, tested refurbished laptop is the smarter spend for most people.
Not really. Anything badged as a gaming laptop at this price makes too many compromises to play modern games well. You are better off with a solid all-rounder for work and study, and a console or a higher budget if gaming matters to you.
Yes, comfortably, for most courses. A 16GB Windows laptop or a refurbished business model at this price handles essays, research and general study with ease. See our full guide to the best laptops for students for course-specific advice.
Around £400 for a reliable new Windows laptop like the HP 15-fc, or a little less for a Chromebook if your work is browser-based. Below that you are usually paying for tiny storage, very little RAM or a screen you will not enjoy using.
How we know: Hardvance is a UK laptop and computer retailer. We sell, ship and support these laptops every week, and we handle the returns and warranty claims when something is not right. That gives us a clear view of which budget models hold up, which specifications people end up regretting, and where the genuine value sits under £500. We cross-check our picks against independent reviews, and we only recommend laptops we actually stock and stand behind.
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About Hardvance Team
The Hardvance hardware team builds, upgrades and troubleshoots custom PCs every day. Our buying guides are practical and free of hype, drawn from hands-on experience across AMD and Intel platforms, and focused on the parts that genuinely matter for your build and your budget.
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