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| The ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 received a 10/10 iFixit score for having excellent repairability. |
The legendary business laptop gets a stealthy 2026 refresh, complete with next-gen Intel chips, OLED options, and eye-watering maxed-out prices.
It’s been a quiet rollout, but Lenovo has officially started selling the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 – a laptop that many enterprise users have been waiting for since its brief teaser at MWC 2026 back in March. While the company hasn’t made much noise about the launch, eagle-eyed shoppers in Australia, the UK, and Europe have spotted the new 14-inch workhorse listed on Lenovo’s regional websites.
North American fans, however, will have to hold their breath. Lenovo’s Canadian and US sites still show the laptop as “coming soon,” with no firm release date or pricing in sight. For now, the rest of the world gets first dibs.
Panther Lake Powers the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 – AMD Variants Coming Later
The headline feature of the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 is its processor lineup. At launch, Lenovo is exclusively offering Intel Panther Lake chips – a surprise move given that AMD’s Ryzen AI Pro series has been gaining serious traction in business laptops. The full range of available Intel processors includes no fewer than eight options, from the efficient Core Ultra 5 325 all the way up to the flagship Core Ultra X7 358H.
Here’s the complete Panther Lake lineup Lenovo is shipping right now:
- Core Ultra 5 325
- Core Ultra 5 332 vPro
- Core Ultra 5 335 vPro
- Core Ultra 5 338H vPro
- Core Ultra 7 355
- Core Ultra 7 365 vPro
- Core Ultra 7 356H
- Core Ultra X7 358H
If you’re an AMD loyalist, don’t worry – Lenovo has confirmed that AMD Ryzen AI 7 Pro 450 configurations will eventually arrive. No word yet on exactly when, but given the staggered rollout, it’s likely we’ll see those before the end of 2026.
Base Specs Are Solid – But Upgrades Get Expensive Fast
The entry-level ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 is no slouch. In all markets where it’s available, the base configuration starts with a Core Ultra 5 325, 16 GB of LPCAMM2 RAM, a 256 GB M.2 2280 PCIe Gen 4 SSD, a 60 Wh battery, and a 1200p IPS display. That’s a perfectly capable setup for most office work, remote collaboration, and light content creation.
But the real story is how far you can push the configuration. Lenovo is offering customization options that can turn this modest business laptop into a true mobile workstation. You can spec it with:
- Up to 64 GB of RAM (using LPCAMM2 modules, which are faster and more repairable than soldered LPDDR)
- Up to a 2 TB PCIe Gen 5 SSD – yes, Gen 5, for blazing-fast data transfers
- A 2.8K OLED display with 500 nits peak brightness and a 30-120 Hz variable refresh rate – perfect for media work and all-day coding sessions
If that weren’t enough, Lenovo also offers optional extras depending on your region: NFC, a fingerprint reader (standard on many business models but worth checking), an IR-capable webcam for Windows Hello, a massive 75 Wh battery, a 100 W USB Type-C power adapter, and 4G WWAN for always-connected productivity.
But all that goodness comes at a price – and we mean a serious price.
Fully Loaded, the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 Costs as Much as a Used Car
Here’s where things get jaw-dropping. While the starting prices are already premium, a fully maxed-out ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 will set you back:
- Australia: AUD 8,019
- United Kingdom: £3,400
- Eurozone: €3,899 – €3,960 (depending on the country)
Yes, you read that correctly. For context, that’s more than many high-end gaming laptops and even some desktop replacement workstations. To put it in perspective, you could buy a very nice used car for the same money – or a brand-new MacBook Pro and still have cash left over for accessories.
Of course, most business buyers won’t tick every single box. But if you’re a power user who needs the best mobile display, maximum RAM, 4G connectivity, and the largest battery, Lenovo is happy to take your money.
Regional Pricing: Where to Buy (and Where You Can’t)
As of late April 2026, here’s how the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 is priced across different markets:
- Australia: Starting at AUD 2,749
- United Kingdom: Starting at £1,560
- Eurozone: Starting between €1,719 and €1,829 (varies by country, e.g., France, Germany, Ireland)
North American shoppers are stuck in limbo – Lenovo’s US and Canadian websites only show a “coming soon” placeholder. No pricing, no pre-orders, no ETA. Given that previous ThinkPad T14 generations launched at around $1,200–$1,500 in the US, expect something similar for the Gen 7 base model. But with the current global chip landscape and inflation, don’t be surprised if it lands closer to $1,600.
Should You Wait for the AMD Version?
That’s the million-dollar question. The Intel Panther Lake chips in the Gen 7 are no slouches – early benchmarks from Lenovo’s own testing suggest significant gains in both single-core performance and AI workloads compared to last year’s Meteor Lake and Arrow Lake parts. But AMD’s Ryzen AI 7 Pro 450 is rumored to bring even better battery life and integrated graphics performance.
If you need a laptop right now and you’re in a region where the Intel model is available, it’s a solid choice. But if you can wait a few months, the AMD version might offer better value – especially if you care about running local AI models or light gaming during your downtime.
One Last Thing: A Deal Worth Considering
While the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 is fresh off the press, last year’s model is still an excellent machine – and it’s currently seeing some nice discounts. If you need a reliable business laptop without waiting for North American availability or paying Gen 7 premiums, you can check out the ThinkPad T14 Gen 6 here on Amazon for a very reasonable $1,239 at the time of writing. It’s a proven workhorse with plenty of life left in it.
Final Thoughts: A Classic Reborn, but Not for Everyone
The ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 is everything longtime fans of the series have come to expect: a no-nonsense, durable, highly configurable business laptop with a superb keyboard and enough ports to make a dongle cry. The addition of Panther Lake processors and the optional OLED VRR display brings it firmly into 2026.
But the staggered regional launch, lack of North American availability, and sky-high fully-loaded prices may give some buyers pause. If you’re in Australia, the UK, or Europe and you have the budget, it’s a fantastic machine. For everyone else? Either wait for the AMD version or grab the previous generation at a discount.
Lenovo has confirmed that more regions and configurations will roll out over the coming months. We’ll keep you posted as soon as the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 lands in North America – and when those Ryzen AI models finally arrive.
Sources: Lenovo Australia, Lenovo France, Lenovo Germany, Lenovo Ireland, Lenovo UK, LaptopsCheck.com
- Lenovo Australia – ThinkPad T14 Gen 7
- Lenovo France – ThinkPad T14 Gen 7
- Lenovo Germany – ThinkPad T14 Gen 7
- Lenovo Ireland – ThinkPad T14 Gen 7
- Lenovo UK – ThinkPad T14 Gen 7
- AMD Ryzen AI Meets Classic Lenovo – LaptopsCheck
- ThinkPad T Series Reinvented – LaptopsCheck


