A few months after Lenovo first announced it, Lenovo’s ThinkPad P14s i Gen 7 is now available internationally with Intel Panther Lake, up to 96 GB of LPCAMM2 RAM, optional Nvidia RTX Pro Blackwell graphics and 5G support.
The new 14-inch workstation-style ThinkPad is listed across multiple markets including Australia, Hong Kong, the UK and parts of the Eurozone, according to Notebookcheck. The launch matters because Lenovo is putting unusually high memory capacity, discrete workstation graphics and cellular connectivity into a compact business chassis rather than reserving those options for larger mobile workstations.
Lenovo ThinkPad P14s i Gen 7 launches internationally with Intel Panther Lake and 96 GB LPCAMM2 RAM
The ThinkPad P14s i Gen 7 replaces the Gen 6 model Notebookcheck reviewed in November 2025. The new model shifts to LPCAMM2 (LPDDR5X) RAM running at 8,533 MT/s, giving it higher memory bandwidth than its predecessor, according to the source material.
Lenovo’s entry configuration varies by market, but the base hardware listed for Australia and Hong Kong starts with a Core Ultra 5 336H vPro, 16 GB of LPCAMM2 RAM, a 60 Wh battery, a 512 GB SSD and a 1200p IPS display with a 60 Hz refresh rate and 45% NTSC color coverage.
At the time of Notebookcheck’s report, Lenovo priced that configuration at AUD 2,899 in Australia and HKD 16,583 in Hong Kong. In the UK and Eurozone, the starting point is less straightforward: Notebookcheck says the new laptop starts at £2,419 in the UK and €2,299-€2,860 in the Eurozone after adjusting Lenovo’s configurator to a Core Ultra 7 366H vPro, 16 GB RAM, 512 GB storage, integrated graphics, and the same display and battery as the Australia and Hong Kong model.
Out of the box, however, the UK and Eurozone defaults cited by Notebookcheck are higher. Those configurations start at £2,730 and €2,509-€3,219 with a Core Ultra 7 356H and an Nvidia RTX Pro 500 Blackwell (6 GB) laptop GPU.
The ceiling is much more aggressive. Lenovo offers the machine with up to a Core Ultra X9 388H vPro, 96 GB of LPCAMM2 RAM, a 2 TB PCIe Gen 5 SSD, a 75 Wh battery and a Snapdragon X61 5G modem. Buyers can also select a 120 Hz VRR IPS display with 3,072 x 1,920 resolution and 500 nits brightness.
96 GB LPCAMM2 memory and Nvidia graphics push the 14-inch ThinkPad into heavier pro workloads
The standout spec is not just the 96 GB capacity. It is that Lenovo is offering that memory ceiling in a 14-inch ThinkPad, using LPCAMM2 rather than conventional soldered memory alone.
Analysis: For developers, engineers, data workers, virtualization-heavy users and creative professionals, the practical benefit is headroom. The source does not provide benchmark results, but the configuration tells the story: high memory capacity, faster listed memory speed, optional discrete graphics and PCIe Gen 5 storage give this machine a different profile from a standard corporate thin-and-light.
The graphics stack spans Arc B390 integrated graphics and up to Nvidia RTX Pro 1000 Blackwell discrete graphics. Lenovo also lists the RTX Pro 500 Blackwell (6 GB) in default UK and Eurozone configurations, while the higher-end option reaches RTX Pro 1000 Blackwell (8 GB).
That GPU choice changes the positioning. Integrated graphics keeps the machine closer to a business productivity laptop. The Nvidia options move it toward GPU-accelerated professional work, though Notebookcheck’s source material does not include performance figures or certification details.
| Configuration area | Lower-end listing | Higher-end option cited |
|---|---|---|
| Processor | Core Ultra 5 336H vPro | Core Ultra X9 388H vPro |
| Memory | 16 GB LPCAMM2 | 96 GB LPCAMM2 |
| Storage | 512 GB SSD | 2 TB PCIe Gen 5 SSD |
| Battery | 60 Wh | 75 Wh |
| Graphics | Integrated graphics / Arc B390 | Nvidia RTX Pro 1000 Blackwell (8 GB) |
| Display | 1200p IPS, 60 Hz, 45% NTSC | 3,072 x 1,920 IPS, 120 Hz VRR, 500 nits |
| Connectivity | Standard laptop connectivity implied by configs | Snapdragon X61 5G modem option |
The display options reinforce that split. The entry panel is functional on paper. The 3,072 x 1,920, 120 Hz VRR, 500-nit IPS option is the one that better fits users pairing higher compute specs with a sharper, faster screen.
For readers tracking Lenovo’s broader workstation and business-laptop lineup, this launch sits near other recent configuration-heavy ThinkPad stories, including 96GB ThinkPad P16s Gen 5 Lands Early in Europe With AMD and 32-Hour Lenovo ThinkPad E16 Drags Panther Lake Downmarket. Those links are useful context for how Lenovo is spreading high-memory and new-processor options across different ThinkPad classes.
ThinkPad P14s i Gen 7 buyers should watch pricing, configurations and 5G availability by region
The immediate buying issue is configuration spread. Notebookcheck’s report shows clear differences between Australia, Hong Kong, the UK and the Eurozone, both in default specifications and entry pricing.
That matters because the headline machine — 96 GB RAM, 2 TB PCIe Gen 5 SSD, 75 Wh battery, high-resolution 120 Hz display and 5G — is not the same as the starting machine. In the UK, adding the top options pushes pricing to £6,780, according to Notebookcheck. A configuration with a Core Ultra 9 386H vPro and RTX Pro 1000 Blackwell (8 GB) reaches £7,410.
Analysis: The P14s i Gen 7 looks most compelling for buyers who specifically need workstation-adjacent specifications in a smaller chassis. If the workload does not need the memory ceiling, Nvidia GPU or 5G modem, the base pricing and display trade-offs become more important.
The Snapdragon X61 5G modem option is another detail to verify locally. The source confirms Lenovo offers it, but carrier support, regional availability and exact bundled configurations are not established in the supplied material.
The next decision point is practical rather than speculative: buyers should compare Lenovo’s configurator in their own market before treating any one regional price as representative. The ThinkPad P14s i Gen 7 can be a compact high-spec workstation, but only if the desired CPU, GPU, memory, battery, display and modem options are actually available together where it is being purchased.
Key Takeaways
- Lenovo is bringing workstation-class specs to a compact 14-inch business laptop.
- Up to 96 GB of LPCAMM2 RAM and optional Nvidia RTX Pro Blackwell graphics could appeal to mobile professionals with demanding workloads.
- International pricing shows the new ThinkPad sits firmly in the premium business laptop segment.










