Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro Review: This Might Be Samsung’s Most Complete Laptop Yet

Updated : Apr 23, 2026 16:36
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Editorji News Desk
Key Specifications
Price : ₹2,14,990
14-inch, 3K 16:10, 2X AMOLED, 120Hz Intel Core Ultra X7 358H 32GB LPDDR5X RAM 
1TB PCIe 67.18 Wh Battery + 65W Charging Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth v5.4,
Our Review
9 / 10
Design9.5/10
Display9/10
Performance9/10
Software & AI 8/10
Keyboard8.5/10
Trackpad9/10
Battery Life9/10
Charging8.5/10
Pros
  • Excellent AMOLED display quality
  • Strong real-world performance
  • Impressive battery life
  • Lightweight and highly portable
  • Quiet thermals and cooling
  • Great Galaxy ecosystem features
Cons
  • Expensive for the segment
  • Webcam feels basic for price
  • Speakers are just average
  • No SD card slot
  • Keyboard stiffness may not suit all

The thin-and-light category is packed right now, and most machines here don’t try very hard to stand out. They lean on the same core ideas: keep things slim, stay portable, offer just enough power for everyday work, and deliver battery life that gets you through the day. The Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro doesn’t exactly break away from that template, but it does try to stretch it by addressing some of the typical compromises, especially around performance, that usually come with ultra-portable machines

That added ambition shows up clearly in the pricing. The 14-inch base model, equipped with 16GB RAM, 512GB storage, and the Intel Core Ultra 5 325 processor, starts at ₹1,69,990. That already pushes it into the premium bracket. The variant I tested, also a 14-inch model, goes further with an Intel Core Ultra 7 358H chip, 32GB RAM, and 1TB storage, priced at ₹2,14,990.

At this level, just delivering on design and performance is not enough. Buyers expect a more complete experience, especially when it comes to ecosystem features, something devices like the Apple MacBook Pro have consistently done well. 

So the real question is simple: does this machine justify what it asks for?

Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro Review: Design

The first thing that hits you with the Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro is just how effortlessly portable it feels. The 14-inch variant I tested measures only 11.6mm in thickness and tips the scales at a little over 1.2kg. For a machine that is also chasing strong performance and solid battery life, that balance is genuinely impressive. 

In everyday use, that slim profile translates into real convenience. Sliding it into a backpack never feels like a burden, and on days when I was hopping on the Metro, it barely registered as extra weight.

Samsung has gone with an aluminium build, and the moment you pick it up, the premium feel is obvious. It feels rigid and well put together. That said, I did notice a small ergonomic quirk. The wrist rest tapers into a slightly sharper edge than I would like, and during longer typing sessions, it occasionally presses into my wrists. It is not a major issue, but it is something I kept becoming aware of over time.

Port selection is fairly well thought out. On the left side, there are two USB-C Thunderbolt 4 ports, alongside a full-sized HDMI 2.1 port capable of outputting up to 8K at 60Hz or 5K at 120Hz, which is great for high-resolution external displays. 

On the right, you get a 3.5mm combo audio jack and a USB 3.2 Type-A port. However, I do feel the absence of an SD card slot on this 14-inch model, especially given the Pro branding.

Turn the laptop over, and you will notice rubber feet that provide grip and a slight lift, bottom-firing speakers positioned along the edges, and an intake vent near the top. The exhaust is placed along the rear hinge, keeping heat away from the sides, which works well in practice.

The lid keeps things minimal and clean, and Samsung says it has refined the hinge mechanism. I did find the opening and closing action smoother overall, although it still snaps shut slightly towards the end. There is a bit of wobble, but even when typing quickly or using the touchscreen, the display remains stable.

Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro Review: Display

My test unit of the Galaxy Book6 Pro came with a 14-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X panel with a 3K resolution of 2880 x 1800, and it is one of those displays that immediately grabs your attention. It is also a touchscreen with support for up to 10 simultaneous inputs, and I found myself instinctively tapping, scrolling, and interacting with it far more than I initially expected.

What really stands out is how vibrant everything looks. Colours do not just appear accurate, they have a certain richness that makes content feel more engaging. The panel runs at 120Hz and can dynamically shift between 30Hz and 120Hz depending on usage. In practice, this means smoother animations and scrolling when needed, while quietly conserving battery when things are static.

Samsung has also included VESA DisplayHDR True Black 1000 certification, with peak brightness going up to 1000 nits in HDR and around 500 nits in SDR. Combined with the deep blacks AMOLED panels are known for, contrast levels here are excellent, and HDR content looks properly tuned.

The high resolution on a relatively compact 14-inch screen ensures everything appears sharp and detailed. It covers 100 per cent of the DCI-P3 colour gamut and exceeds 100 per cent of sRGB, so for workloads involving Photoshop or DaVinci Resolve, it holds up comfortably. Samsung’s Vision Booster is also present, adjusting brightness, contrast, and colours based on ambient conditions. It works subtly in the background, but it does make a difference over time.

The 16:10 aspect ratio gives you more vertical space, which is especially useful for documents and spreadsheets. Bezels are slim, though not the thinnest, and the bottom chin is slightly thicker with a discreet Samsung logo.

This is still a glossy panel, but Gorilla Glass with DXC coating helps reduce reflections. It is not completely glare-free, but it remains usable in most lighting conditions.

All things considered, this is a display that feels premium and performs reliably, whether you are working or just watching content.

Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro Review: Speakers and Webcam

The Speakers and the webcam are not where the Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro tries to steal the spotlight, and that becomes clear pretty quickly. The 14-inch model uses bottom-firing stereo speakers with Dolby Atmos support. They deliver decent volume and a bit of richness, but they stop short of feeling exceptional.

That said, they are far from disappointing. For everyday scenarios like streaming shows, hopping on calls, or casual music playback, they hold up just fine. Most users will find them perfect for almost all of their day-to-day stuff. 

The issue is more about expectations. When a laptop gets so many other things right, you start hoping for audio that stands out as well, and here it feels like Samsung has chosen to stay within safe limits.

The webcam is where the compromise is easier to spot. You are looking at a 2MP sensor that records in 1080p, which feels a bit basic for a premium device in 2026. I honestly was hoping to see an 1440p sensor. It works decently well for meetings and video calls, so functionality is not a concern. You also get access to Windows Studio Effects such as auto framing, eye contact, and background blur, which help clean things up and make calls feel more polished.

Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro Review: Keyboard and Touchpad

Samsung has largely carried forward the keyboard setup from its previous Galaxy Book lineups, and that is not a bad thing. On the Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro, typing still feels comfortable and well thought out. The keycaps are generously sized, spacing is just right, and long writing sessions never feel cramped. There is also white backlighting that shines cleanly through the legends, so working in dim environments is handled without any fuss.

The keys themselves do not travel very deep and bottom out fairly quickly, which means you can type very fast on the keyboard. They feel tactile enough, although faster typing can make them a bit noisy. What stood out more to me was the stiffness. Even after writing somewhere between 20,000 and 30,000 words, I never completely warmed up to that firmness. Some people might actually like that slightly resistant feel, but for me, it remained a small irritation.

The touchpad, however, is where things come together beautifully. It is spacious, smooth to the touch, and consistently responsive. Navigation feels effortless, palm rejection works reliably, and the haptic feedback is evenly tuned across the surface.

Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro Review: Performance and Benchmarks

I went into testing the Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro expecting typical thin-and-light behaviour, efficient, quick, but not exactly powerful. That assumption did not last long. This machine ended up delivering far more performance than I had anticipated.

Powering it is Intel’s Panther Lake platform, and my unit came equipped with the Core Ultra X7 358H. It is a 16-core processor with a mix of 8 efficiency cores, 4 performance cores, and 4 low-power efficiency cores, capable of boosting up to 4.8GHz within a 25W to 80W power range. In real-world usage, the way it balances efficiency and performance stands out. It is not chasing outright dominance, but for most workloads, it never feels like it is holding you back.

Here is how it performed in CPU benchmarks like Cinebench and Geekbench. 

In Cinebench R23, it scored 1954 in single-core and 13587 in multi-core. Cinebench 2026 returned 480 for single-core and 3488 for multi-core. 

Geekbench results were 2779 in single-core and 16546 in multi-core. For graphics, the OpenCL test on Geekbench delivered a score of 55920.

Numbers aside, what matters is how it behaves in actual work. I pushed it through fairly demanding tasks. Photoshop handled large PSD files with multiple layers without slowing down. In Premiere Pro, a complex 1080p timeline with multiple effects played smoothly without any stutter. 

Even in PugetBench, it held its ground with a score of 33604 in Premiere Pro and 8462 in Photoshop, which is impressive for a device in this class.

AI performance is another area where this laptop quietly flexes. With a dedicated NPU capable of up to 50 TOPS, a lot of AI-driven tasks can run directly on the device without needing an internet connection. 

That said, if your workflow involves running large language models locally, stepping up to something like the Samsung Galaxy Book6 Ultra with a dedicated GPU would make more sense. As for graphics, the integrated Intel Arc GPU performed better than expected.

Out of curiosity, I even tried gaming. This is not built as a gaming machine, but it can hold its own if you tweak settings. 

In Black Myth: Wukong, running at 2880 x 1800 on low settings, I saw around 44FPS without frame generation. Dropping to 1080p and enabling frame generation pushed it to a much smoother 70 to 75FPS.

I also tested a few more titles at 1080p on low settings. Cyberpunk 2077 averaged 88FPS, Ghost of Tsushima came in at 103FPS, and Valorant on high settings ran at 210FPS. For a thin-and-light laptop, that is more than enough if you just want to unwind with some casual gaming.

Thermals are handled well, too. Even during longer benchmark runs and gaming sessions, the laptop stayed relatively cool. The upper section of the keyboard did get a bit warm, but nothing uncomfortable. Samsung’s updated vapour chamber cooling and improved fan design clearly make a difference.

Fan noise is another pleasant surprise. Whether I was running benchmarks or gaming, the fans stayed extremely quiet. In fact, I had to bring the laptop close to my ear during testing just to confirm that they were spinning.

This is not a laptop you buy primarily for gaming, but that is not the point. For professionals, creators, or anyone constantly on the move, it delivers strong, reliable performance, with the added bonus that it can handle a bit of gaming when you need a break.

Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro Review: Software and Galaxy AI

Running on Windows 11, the Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro delivers a familiar experience, but not without its usual Windows quirks. Updates can still feel intrusive, often popping up at inconvenient moments and pushing their way through, which is more down to Microsoft than anything Samsung is doing here. There is also a strong push towards Microsoft Copilot, and while some of its features are genuinely useful, others feel less essential in day-to-day use.

Where this machine starts to differentiate itself is through Samsung’s ecosystem layer. If you are already using Galaxy devices, the experience changes quite noticeably. Pairing it with something like the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra unlocks features that feel seamless rather than forced. You can use your phone as a webcam, extend or mirror your display, and move files or clipboard content between devices almost instantly. That level of integration makes everyday workflows feel smoother.

If you are already on a Galaxy S series phone, or even using a Fold or Flip, these features feel polished and reliable.

On the AI front, alongside the standard Copilot tools, Samsung’s Galaxy AI suite feels more practical in real use. Features like photo editing, writing assistance, and translation are here, but AI Search stood out the most. Being able to describe a file and have the system locate it quickly is genuinely useful.

There are also smaller conveniences baked in. You can ask Galaxy AI to adjust settings like display vibrancy, and it handles it without digging through menus.

None of these features is revolutionary on its own, but together, they make the overall experience feel more connected, responsive, and intuitive.

Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro Review: Battery life and Charging

Battery life ended up being one of the most impressive parts of the Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro, especially considering how slim and portable it is. Samsung has managed to fit in a 67.18Wh battery, and in real-world use, that capacity translates into consistently strong endurance.

In my usage, with the system set to best performance mode and brightness hovering between 50 and 55 per cent, the laptop regularly delivered around 14 to 15 hours of screen-on time. That figure does fall well short of the 30 hours Samsung advertises, but in practical terms, it still means most users can comfortably stretch this across two days without needing to reach for a charger.

What makes this more impressive is the category it sits in. Thin-and-light laptops with this level of performance usually struggle to go much beyond 4 to 5 hours. Here, thanks to the efficiency improvements brought in by Intel’s Panther Lake chips, that limitation feels largely overcome.

Charging is handled through a 65W USB-C adapter, which is compact enough to carry around easily and can double up for charging other devices. Going from zero to full takes roughly between 1 hour 20 minutes and 1 hour 30 minutes. If you are in a hurry, plugging it in for about 30 minutes gets you close to 40 to 45 per cent, which is enough to keep you going for several more hours.

Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro Review: Verdict

The Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro is clearly stepping into territory dominated by the Apple MacBook Pro, and after using it for a while, it is evident that it is not out of place there. What impressed me most is how naturally it brings together performance, portability, and battery life without making it feel like a compromise-driven package.

It also holds its own when it comes to ecosystem and features. Samsung’s integrations feel mature enough to go up against Apple’s tightly knit ecosystem, and that shows in everyday use. 

Plus, whether I was editing photos, scrubbing through video timelines, or juggling multiple apps at once, the experience remained smooth and consistent. The AMOLED display only elevates things further, making both work and entertainment feel equally engaging.

Battery performance is another strong point. It handled long workdays comfortably in my usage, and the fast charging meant I was rarely waiting around for it to top up.

This is not positioned as a gaming machine, and it does not need to be. For professionals, creators, and anyone looking for a premium, dependable laptop on the move, it makes a very strong case for itself, getting closer to the MacBook Pro experience than most Windows laptops manage.

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