Microsoft just launched the Surface Laptop 8. It now runs on the Snapdragon X2 chip (replacing the X Elite on the previous generation), but that’s not the most interesting bit.
The lineup consists of two variants, wherein the 13.8-inch model claims to provide up to 20 hours of battery life on a single charge.
What does the new Surface Laptop bring to the table?
The Laptop 8 is available in two screen sizes: 13.8-inch and 15-inch (both touchscreens). A new Jade color joins the 13.8-inch lineup alongside the existing options.
Under the hood, both models run on the new Snapdragon X2 chips, which claim to deliver up to 58% more graphics performance than the previous generation.
The 15-inch model steps up to a sharper 262 PPI display, up from 201 PPI on the outgoing version. Both models feature a touchscreen, alongside what Microsoft says is the highest-ranked laptop camera by DXOMARK.
The laptop is available today starting at $1,599 for the baseline variant with the X2 Plus (10-core) chipset alongside 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage, with business configurations available from July 14, 2026.
Built for this world so you can create the next. Now available in Jade, with Dune on the Pro Flex Keyboard.
— Microsoft Surface (@surface)
All-day battery. Built-in AI. Performance that moves with you.
Learn More: https://t.co/zDKAKd42XM pic.twitter.com/HGH3HmuK9n
Is the battery life claim actually believable?
To put things into perspective, the Surface Laptop 8’s claim, at least on paper, is more than what Apple claims for its latest M5 MacBook Air’s 13-inch variant, by two hours no less.
If that claim actually holds up with typical day-to-day usage on the device, it becomes a genuinely compelling answer for Windows users who’ve been told to just switch to a Mac if they want all-day battery life.
What bothers me the most is the $1,599 price tag, which is $500 higher than what the M5 MacBook Air costs in the United States for the same memory and storage configuration, and $600 higher than the Surface Laptop 7’s launch price.
Microsoft is probably aware of the price gap, which is why it’s offering a free Arc Mouse (worth around $90), up to $900 in trade-in credit (till June 30), and a 50% discount on a two-year Microsoft Complete plan when purchased with the device.