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Business Choice 2025: Your Favorite Laptop Brands for Work

Whether you're simply using a work-issue laptop or you buy and deploy them for hundreds of employees, these brands come with the highest recommendations from our readers.

 & Eric Griffith Senior Editor, Features

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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Mobile workstation sales are a tiny part of the overall laptop market—just 2.1%, according to numbers at Statista—but if you use the word workstation in its generic sense rather than referring to professional design and engineering apps, the numbers become a lot larger. Notebooks of all shapes and sizes are used to for work, at home as well as in the office. In our survey, 19.6% of respondents say they have a single laptop for both personal and business use.

Every year in our annual Readers' Choice survey we ask about the laptop brands people use for work in both home offices and company headquarters, as well as which models IT managers prefer. This year's results are similar to last year—showing some phenomenal consistency in the quality certain brands bring to the work laptop experience. 


The Top Work Laptop Brands for 2025

Apple’s and Lenovo’s overall satisfaction scores for work laptops drop this year. Yet both are still the leaders in this category, with the best satisfaction and recommendation ratings in the bunch. 

Apple is in a class by itself: The MacBook maker has won every Business Choice award for laptops since 2006. Its highest scores date back to the aughts, when it hit a 9.3 for satisfaction, and it came close again last year at 9.2. Nevertheless, a drop back to 9.0 this year still keeps Apple on top. MacBooks also exhibit excellent numbers for ease of use, reliability, tech support, and display quality. 

Lenovo is the Business Choice winner among Windows-based brands, scoring ahead of Asus, Acer, Dell, and HP. Its best rating is for the quality of its touch screens, but Lenovo also rates well for ease of use. This is the third year in a row that Lenovo has been the top business pick among Windows systems.

(Note: Click the down, left, and right arrows in our interactive charts to view the various elements of our survey results.) 

Of those other brands, Asus and Acer make for the best follow-on Windows systems, according to respondents using them at the office or for work-at-home. Asus has the standout score for cost and repairs, even better than the overall winners above. Dell and HP don't stand out this year, except for Dell displaying the best score for ease of laptop setup, slightly ahead of Lenovo.

For our current top-rated, lab-tested business laptops, read The Best Work Laptops for 2025.


Business Laptop Operating Systems

Since the origins of computing, we have debated the merits of operating systems, particularly Windows versus macOS. That battle continues today. Last year was the first time we asked about laptop OSes for work, and Apple's macOS won handily. This year, it does so again, with even better scores. Apple’s notebook OS outpaces Microsoft Windows on every measure, sometimes by an entire point, as it does in reliability, security, and included software. The gulf is even wider for tech support. 

Apple has fewer users—only 12% in our survey. Compare that with 15.2% global market share across laptops and desktops, according to Statcounter. Yet those using macOS for work feel more satisfaction in every way. The combination of hardware and software in Apple's ecosystem remains an unbeatable choice for getting work done.

For our expert's opinion, read Which OS Is Best?


IT-Managed Laptops

This is our third year of asking IT managers to rate the brand of laptops they prefer to deploy. HP has won this category every time. Admittedly, last year we saw a pretty tight tie with Dell on so many key factors we had to give the award to both. But for 2025, HP manages to stay just ahead of Dell for overall satisfaction, enough to take the win. 

According to Statista, the big three PC brands are Dell, HP, and Lenovo, so they obviously come to the fore in IT-centric questions. All three match up exceptionally in our results. It makes for a tough decision—Dell takes the lead in several categories such as value, tech support, repairs, and remote management, all areas that are key to the success of an IT department. Even bronze medalist Lenovo claims the lead in ease of use, satisfaction with laptop size and weight, and laptop durability.

But only HP can claim three years of the highest ratings in overall satisfaction with IT.

It's interesting to see the flip-flop between Lenovo-loving end users (above) and the IT managers who prefer HP. Presumably the office rank and file care less about deployment and manageability extras such as HP's Wolf Security suite.

For more, check out our list of The Best Mobile Workstations for 2025


The PCMag Business Choice survey for Laptops was in the field from November 11, 2024 to February 3, 2025. For more information on how we conduct surveys, read the survey methodology

About Our Expert

Eric Griffith

Eric Griffith

Senior Editor, Features

My Experience

I've been writing about computers, the internet, and technology professionally since 1992, more than half of that time with PCMag. I arrived at the end of the print era of PC Magazine as a senior writer. I served for a time as managing editor of business coverage before settling back into the features team for the last decade and a half. I write features on all tech topics, plus I handle several special projects, including the Readers' Choice and Business Choice surveys and yearly coverage of the Best ISPs and Best Gaming ISPs, Best Products of the Year, and Best Brands (plus the Best Brands for Tech Support, Longevity, and Reliability).

I started in tech publishing right out of college, writing and editing stories about hardware and development tools. I migrated to software and hardware coverage for families, and I spent several years exclusively writing about the then-burgeoning technology called Wi-Fi. I was on the founding staff of several magazines, including Windows Sources, FamilyPC, and Access Internet Magazine. All of which are now defunct, and it's not my fault. I have freelanced for publications as diverse as Sony Style, Playboy.com, and Flux. I got my degree at Ithaca College in, of all things, television/radio. But I minored in writing so I'd have a future.

In my long-lost free time, I wrote some novels, a couple of which are not just on my hard drive: BETA TEST ("an unusually lighthearted apocalyptic tale," according to Publishers' Weekly) and a YA book called KALI: THE GHOSTING OF SEPULCHER BAY. Go get them on Kindle.

I work from my home in Ithaca, NY, and did it long before pandemics made it cool.

The Technology I Use

My first computer was a Laser 128, an Apple II-compatible clone with an integrated keyboard, matched with an eye-straining monochrome green monitor. I used it to type papers in college for other people for money...until I discovered the Mac SE in the college computer room. That changed my life. My first cellphone was a Samsung Uproar—the silver one with the built-in MP3 player from the Napster days (the pre-iPod era).

I use an iPhone 15 Pro hourly and an iPad Air infrequently (but I'm always in the market for a cheap Android tablet). I have a PlayStation 5 just to play Spider-Man, and several Windows machines, including a work-issued Lenovo ThinkPad. I talk to Alexa and Siri all day long. I do the majority of my computing on a 15-inch LG Gram laptop attached to a Thunderbolt hub to run a multi-monitor setup—I overdid it on the power needed to simply work from home.

I'm most at home in Microsoft Word after decades of writing there. More and more, I turn to services like Google Docs, using tools like Grammarly. I use Google's Chrome browser due to an addiction to several extensions I think I can't live without, but probably could. I use Excel extensively on data-intensive stories, but for chart creation, we've switched over entirely to using Infogram for interactive features that are hard to find elsewhere. I do a lot of graphics work for my stories, but limit myself to the free and amazing Paint.NET software to edit images.

I'm a firm evangelist for using the cloud for backup and syncing of files; I'm primarily using Dropbox, which has never failed me, but I also have redundant setups on Microsoft OneDrive, plus extra picture backups on Amazon Photos and iCloud. Why take chances? For entertainment, mine is a streaming-only household—my kid has never seen network TV and barely been exposed to commercials, thanks to Roku and Amazon Music. The house is peppered with smart speakers from Amazon for instant gratification and control of smart home devices like multiple Wyze cameras and Nest Protect smoke detectors. I've got accounts on all the major social networks, to my horror. I have a robot vacuum for each floor of the house. I want a 3D printer, but not sure what I'd use it for.

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