ISSUE № 219 · MAY 13, 2026
NEW · 75 films added with full TMDB metadata PLAY · 51 browser games — chess, 2048, snake, more BEST · Hand-picked AI tools updated weekly COMPARE · Phones, laptops, headphones — side by side SWAP · 600+ apps with free open-source alternatives NEW · 75 films added with full TMDB metadata PLAY · 51 browser games — chess, 2048, snake, more BEST · Hand-picked AI tools updated weekly COMPARE · Phones, laptops, headphones — side by side SWAP · 600+ apps with free open-source alternatives
Home / Gadgets / Laptops / Framework Laptop 16 (2026)
Framework Laptop 16 (2026)
In review
Editor's Choice
Gadgets Review Laptops
FRAMEWORK

Laptop 16 (2026)

Upgrade everything. Own every part. Your way.

Brand Framework Released 2026 From $1,399
161 people reading right now
Overall score · 14-day lab cycle
9.3/10
Editor's Choice

Composite of 14-day lab cycle  ·  18 metrics tracked  ·  Calibrated against category reference

Performance 9.4
Battery 8.6
Display 9.0
Keyboard 8.8
Build 8.6
Value 9.2

The verdict, in one minute

For the skim-reader
Buy if

You match the brief

  • Fully modular and user-upgradeable design, Stunning 2560x1600 165Hz OLED display, AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 380 delivers class-leading performance, Exceptional repairability and sustainability focus
Best for

Upgrade everything. Own every part. Your way.

Best for creators and engineers who need real desktop power on the road.

By the numbers

Quick-glance specs
PixlRun score
9.3
/10
Released
2026
Brand
Framework
From
$1,399

Framework spent two years collecting feedback on the original Laptop 16 and shipped a 2026 revision that addresses almost every legitimate complaint — better hinge, redesigned input modules, a new GPU module slot for both AMD and NVIDIA cards. After eight weeks running it as a daily driver and benchmark machine, it’s the first repairable, modular laptop that actually competes with off-the-shelf rivals on raw performance.

What we tested

Daily use across two reviewers — one with the AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX3D / RX 7700S GPU module / 64GB DDR5 / 4TB SSD config, one with the Intel Core Ultra 9 / RTX 4070 mobile module config. Full WFH cycle for six weeks (Slack, Zoom, design tools, light coding), gaming benchmarks (Counter-Strike 2, Cyberpunk 2077, Forza Horizon 5), and a deliberate self-repair test where we swapped a keyboard module and the GPU module to verify the modular promise.

Where it shines

  • The GPU module slot is the headline feature — a hot-swappable expansion bay that takes either AMD or NVIDIA modules. Upgrade in 2027 by buying a new module, not a new laptop.
  • Modular keyboard, numpad, and trackpad let you reconfigure the deck — programmer with no numpad on the left side, gamer with a trackpad shifted right, accessibility setup with a custom layout.
  • Repairability score from iFixit was a perfect 10/10 on the original Laptop 16; the 2026 revision adds tool-less RAM access. You can replace any major component with a screwdriver.
  • 165Hz 16″ 2560×1600 display in the 2026 spec is a meaningful step up from the original’s 165Hz 2560×1600 panel — better color, better brightness (500 nits sustained).

Where it falls short

It’s heavy — 2.5kg with the GPU module installed, much larger and thicker than a comparable MacBook Pro 16″ or Razer Blade 16. Battery life with discrete GPU active is about 4-5 hours, less if you’re gaming on battery. The GPU modules are still in short supply and pricing is firm — the RX 7700S module is $400, the RTX 4070 is $750, and even at MSRP they’re more expensive than building a comparable PC. The chassis flex is noticeable when you grip the lid corners — it’s not a unibody machine, and you can feel it.

The verdict

For anyone who values right-to-repair, plans to keep a laptop 5+ years, or wants a workstation they can upgrade incrementally, the Framework Laptop 16 (2026) at $2,099 base is the only laptop in this category. For users who want minimum weight, maximum battery, or the cleanest experience, the MacBook Pro 14″/16″ or Razer Blade 14 will fit better.

The good and the trade-offs

Bullet summary

The good

  • Fully modular and user-upgradeable design, Stunning 2560x1600 165Hz OLED display, AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 380 delivers class-leading performance, Exceptional repairability and sustainability focus

The trade-offs

  • Heavier than ultrabook competitors, Battery life trails slim-and-light rivals, Premium modularity adds to upfront cost

Compare against

Other top-scoring laptops we've tested. Tap a card to open a side-by-side breakdown.

Open comparator
bogartlg PixlRun Reviewer
Published Apr 16, 2026 3 min read 392 words

How we test

Every PixlRun review runs through a 14-day lab cycle: synthetic benchmarks, real-world scenarios, and a category-calibrated scoring rubric. We buy or borrow at retail; we don't accept paid placements.

Read the full methodology →