On June 30, HP’s 14-inch OmniBook 5 OLED configuration dropped to $599.99, a 46% reduction from its list price, putting an AMD Ryzen AI 5 330 laptop with a 1,200p OLED panel below the $600 line.
The discounted configuration includes a 1,920 × 1,200 OLED display, 16 GB of LPDDR5X-7500 memory, and a 256 GB PCIe 4.0 SSD, according to Notebookcheck. The lowest-price color options are Glacier Silver and Sahara Silver.
June 30 deal puts the HP OmniBook 5 OLED at $599.99
The trigger is simple: the HP OmniBook 5 is currently listed at $599.99, down 46% from its list price. For this configuration, the headline is not just the discount. It is the combination of OLED, newer AMD silicon, and an upgradeable storage slot at that price.
The processor is AMD’s Ryzen AI 5 330, listed with 1× Zen 5 core, 3× Zen 5c cores, and Radeon 820M integrated graphics. The source material does not provide benchmark scores, so the clean read is spec-based: this is a Ryzen AI-branded chip in a low-cost OLED laptop, not a proven performance claim.
The display is the obvious anchor. HP lists a 14-inch OLED panel with 1,920 × 1,200 resolution, full DCI-P3 coverage, and 300 nits peak brightness.
“The HP OmniBook 5's greatest strength seems to be its OLED panel, which provides deep blacks and vibrant colors unmatched by any LCD at this price point.”
That is the clearest reason this deal stands out on paper. Notebookcheck’s own framing centers the screen, not raw compute or storage capacity.
For readers tracking OLED notebook discounts more broadly, this follows MLXIO’s earlier coverage of the $300 cut that turned the Asus Zenbook S16 into an OLED steal. The OmniBook 5 deal sits in a different price band, but the common thread is clear: the panel is doing much of the selling.
At checkout, color and wireless choices can move the final price
The base deal applies to Glacier Silver and Sahara Silver. Buyers who select Meteor Silver or Starlit Blue should expect to pay an extra $20, according to the supplied deal details.
The wireless configuration also has a small fork. The listed model uses a MediaTek MT7920 wireless card with Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.4. An upgrade to Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 6.0 costs an additional $10.
| Choice | Included at base price | Extra cost |
|---|---|---|
| Glacier Silver | Yes | $0 |
| Sahara Silver | Yes | $0 |
| Meteor Silver | No | $20 |
| Starlit Blue | No | $20 |
| Wi-Fi 7 / Bluetooth 6.0 upgrade | No | $10 |
That makes the advertised $599.99 price conditional on configuration discipline. A buyer who changes both color and wireless options would not be buying the exact base-price version described in the deal.
Notebookcheck also includes the usual deal caveat: pricing may change, and availability can be time-limited or tied to unit supply. That matters here because the central appeal is the sub-$600 price. If the final checkout number moves meaningfully above that, the value argument changes.
OLED is the headline, but the chassis and ports matter too
HP’s spec sheet gives the OmniBook 5 an aluminum body measuring 12.28 × 8.56 × 0.54 in or 312 × 243 × 13.7 mm. Weight is listed at 2.94 lb or 1.33 kg.
The battery is 59 Wh, and charging tops out at 65 W with the included USB-C GaN power adapter. Those are concrete numbers, but the source does not provide battery-life testing, so there is no basis here for runtime claims.
Port selection is broad but not complete. The laptop includes:
- USB-C: Two 10 Gbps USB-C ports with DisplayPort 2.1 and Power Delivery 3.1
- USB-A: Two ports, one at 10 Gbps and one at 5 Gbps
- HDMI: HDMI 2.1
- Audio: 3.5 mm headphone/microphone combo jack
The omissions are also clear. Notebookcheck says USB4 support and an SD card reader “would’ve been a welcome sight.” That is not a minor footnote for buyers who depend on faster external storage workflows or direct camera-card transfers.
This is where the OmniBook 5’s value case narrows. The deal is strongest if the screen, processor generation, and price matter more than premium I/O.
The next decision point is the 256 GB SSD and deal availability
The main storage spec is 256 GB, delivered through a PCIe 4.0 SSD in an M.2 2280 slot. The important detail is that the SSD is user-upgradable, which gives the configuration a path beyond the out-of-box capacity.
That upgrade path matters more than the raw number. HP is selling the discounted model with limited storage, but not trapping the buyer there. The source does not say whether memory is user-upgradable, so the safe assumption for buyers is to treat the listed 16 GB of LPDDR5X-7500 as the configuration to evaluate at purchase.
MLXIO has also been tracking hardware pricing pressure in components, including Europe’s DRAM crisis pain for PC buyers. That context does not change the OmniBook 5’s listed specs, but it does make configuration choices worth checking carefully before checkout.
The practical watch item now is price persistence. If the $599.99 listing holds, the OmniBook 5 is primarily an OLED-first deal with modern AMD branding, upgradeable storage, and a few clear trade-offs. If the price rises, or if the base colors sell through, the case becomes less straightforward.
Key Takeaways
- The deal brings a 14-inch OLED laptop with newer AMD Ryzen AI silicon below $600.
- The configuration includes 16 GB of LPDDR5X memory, though storage is limited to a 256 GB PCIe 4.0 SSD.
- The main value is the OLED display, with 1,920 × 1,200 resolution, full DCI-P3 coverage, and 300 nits peak brightness.










