Lenovo Idea Tab Pro 12.7" Idea Tab Pro Luna Grey

A 12.7-inch 3K 144Hz display paired with the MediaTek Dimensity 8300 and 10200mAh battery delivers 11-hour video streaming and up to 90fps gaming. The included Lenovo Tab Pen Plus and Google Gemini AI tools like Circle to Search streamline note-taking, while quad JBL Dolby Atmos speakers ensure rich audio. Best for students needing a lightweight 620g device for annotating readings, comfortable low-blue-light studying, and multitasking across apps.

CPU MediaTek Dimensity 8300 Processor (3.35 GHz )
RAM 8 GB
Storage 128 GB
Screen 12.7" 2944x1840
OS Android 14
stylus true
cellular true
Lenovo Idea Tab Pro 12.7" Idea Tab Pro Luna Grey tablet
76 Overall Score
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About This Tablet

A 12.7-inch 3K 144Hz display paired with the MediaTek Dimensity 8300 and 10200mAh battery delivers 11-hour video streaming and up to 90fps gaming. The included Lenovo Tab Pen Plus and Google Gemini AI tools like Circle to Search streamline note-taking, while quad JBL Dolby Atmos speakers ensure rich audio. Best for students needing a lightweight 620g device for annotating readings, comfortable low-blue-light studying, and multitasking across apps.

  • CPU MediaTek Dimensity 8300 Processor (3.35 GHz )
  • RAM 8 GB
  • Storage 128 GB
  • Screen 12.7" 2944x1840
  • OS Android 14
  • Stylus
  • Cellular

The 30-Second Version

The 12.7-inch 144Hz panel and 10200mAh battery anchor a tablet that outlasts and out-screens most rivals under $300. You'll haul around 620g and squint outdoors at 400 nits, though. And for the love of all things charged, don't lose Lenovo's 45W brick unless you enjoy glacial recharge speeds.

Overview

The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro grabs attention with a 12.7-inch 3K panel at 144Hz, landing in the 92nd percentile for screen quality in our tablet database. Battery life is another standout, with a 10200mAh cell that sits in the 91st percentile, enough to keep you streaming for over 11 hours. But before you click buy, know that this thing weighs 620g and tops out at just 400 nits of brightness, so it's not winning any portability or outdoor readability awards. The feature set, though, is ridiculous for the price: you get a stylus, keyboard connector, fingerprint and face unlock, and even optional 5G, all of which push it to the 100th percentile for features. That's a lot of tablet for the money, assuming you find a sane listing.

Performance

The MediaTek Dimensity 8300 inside lands in the 83rd percentile for CPU grunt and 82nd for GPU. Translation: this 8-core chip chews through multitasking, note-taking apps, and 144Hz interface animations without breaking a sweat. We're not talking Snapdragon 8 Gen levels of peak power, but it's more than enough for split-screening a lecture and a PDF while Gemini drafts your notes in the background. The 8GB of LPDDR5X RAM (78th percentile) keeps things smooth, though the 128GB of UFS storage (65th percentile) might feel tight if you hoard media. WiFi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3 are both top-tier, earning a 96th percentile connectivity score, so downloads and peripheral pairing are snappy. And yes, PUBG at 90fps with that 360Hz touch sampling means casual gaming feels great, provided you stick to medium settings.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 83.3
GPU 82.2
RAM 77.5
Screen 91.9
Battery 91.2
Feature 99.8
Storage 64.9
User Sentiment 53.3
Connectivity 96.5
Social Proof 97.8

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Huge, pixel-dense 12.7" 144Hz display (92nd percentile) 100th
  • Stellar 10200mAh battery (91st percentile) for all-day use 98th
  • Feature-packed (100th percentile) with pen, keyboard support, and 5G 97th
  • MediaTek Dimensity 8300 delivers snappy everyday performance (83rd percentile CPU) 92th
  • WiFi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3 for cutting-edge connectivity (96th percentile)

Cons

  • Dim 400-nit screen struggles outdoors
  • Heavy at 620g, feels bulky in hand
  • Only 128GB base storage (65th percentile)
  • Charging crawls without Lenovo's specific 45W PD brick
  • Limited security updates promised only until Android 16

The Word on the Street

4.7/5 (2074 reviews)
👍 Owners consistently rave about the large, crisp display and buttery 144Hz refresh rate for reading and media.
🤔 While battery life earns high marks, many buyers are frustrated that only Lenovo's 45W PD charger delivers reasonable charging speeds.
👎 A common gripe is the 620g weight and bulky build, which makes extended handheld use tiring.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU MediaTek Dimensity 8300 Processor (3.35 GHz )
Cores 8

Memory & Storage

RAM 8 GB
RAM Generation LPDDR5X
Storage 128 GB
Storage Type UFS
Expandable Yes

Display

Size 12.7"
Resolution 2944
Panel LCD
Refresh Rate 144 Hz
Brightness 400 nits

Connectivity

Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 6E
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.3
USB-C 1
Cellular Yes

Features

Stylus Support Yes
Stylus Model Lenovo Tab Pen Plus
Fingerprint Reader Yes
Face Unlock Yes

Physical

Weight 0.6 kg / 1.4 lbs
OS Android 14

Value & Pricing

Pricing for the Idea Tab Pro is all over the map, literally: we've seen listings from $250 to over $73,000. The $73,635 spread is clearly some vendor's fever dream, so ignore that. At $250 to $300, it's an absolute steal for students who need a giant canvas and a pen. Once you get above $400, the lack of a charger in the box and that dim display start to sting. If you can snag one from Lenovo or a reputable retailer near the low end, the price-to-performance ratio is excellent for note-taking and media consumption. Just budget for Lenovo's 45W charger if you don't want overnight recharge times.

vs Competition

Next to the Apple iPad Air M4, the Idea Tab Pro gives you a larger screen and a stylus out of the box for hundreds less, but the Air's M4 chip and 600-nit display run circles around the MediaTek and that 400-nit panel. The Xiaomi Pad 7 Pro offers a faster Snapdragon chip and a brighter screen, but you lose the 12.7-inch real estate and some of Lenovo's software polish. The Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 FE+ matches the S Pen experience closely, yet its Exynos processor trails the Dimensity 8300 in raw speed. If you're eyeing the Microsoft Surface Pro 11, that's a full Windows machine, so not a direct rival for Android tasks. In this bunch, the Lenovo stands out as the budget-friendly big-screen note-taker, provided you can forgive its charging quirks and weight.

Spec Lenovo Idea Tab Pro 12.7" Idea Tab Pro Apple iPad Pro M5 Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra SM-X930NZAAXAR Microsoft Surface Pro EP2-20077 Xiaomi Xiaomi Pad 7 PRO Xiaomi Pad 7 PRO HOTWAV R9 Ultra 5G R9 Ultra 5G
CPU MediaTek Dimensity 8300 Processor (3.35 GHz ) Apple M5 MediaTek Dimensity 9400+ 5 GHz intel_core_ultra_7 3000 MHz 2.3 GHz
RAM (GB) 8 16 12 32 12 24
Storage (GB) 128 2000 256 1024 512 512
Screen 12.7" 2944x1840 13" 2752x2064 14.6" 2960x1848 13" 2880x1920 11.2" 3200x2136 11"
OS Android 14 Apple iPadOS Android 16 Windows 11 Android 14 HyperOS Android 15
Stylus true true true true true true
Cellular true true false false false true
Battery (Wh) - 39 - 47 - -
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamScreenBatteryFeatureStorageUser SentimentConnectivitySocial Proof
Lenovo Idea Tab Pro 12.7" Idea Tab Pro 83.382.277.591.991.299.864.953.396.597.8
Apple iPad Pro M5 Compare 96.295.188.299.998.496.899.594.998.497.8
Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra SM-X930NZAAXAR Compare 97.396.381.295.993.386.573.794.963.397.8
Microsoft Surface Pro EP2-20077 Compare 74.49397.598.29984.298.3093.849.4
Xiaomi Xiaomi Pad 7 PRO Xiaomi Pad 7 PRO Compare 97.396.381.298.686.265.789.576.878.886.7
HOTWAV R9 Ultra 5G R9 Ultra 5G Compare 94.393.596.14330.993.789.594.972.447.1

Common Questions

Q: Does the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro come with a charger?

No, there's no charger in the box. Worse, standard USB-C chargers will trickle-charge the tablet painfully slowly. You'll need to buy Lenovo's 45W PD charger to hit decent top-up speeds, otherwise you're looking at overnight charging even with a large power brick.

Q: Is the display bright enough to use outside?

At 400 nits, the LCD panel sits in the bottom quartile for brightness among mid-range tablets. It looks great indoors, but direct sunlight washes it out badly. If you plan to study on the quad or read on a park bench, this isn't the best pick.

Q: Can the Idea Tab Pro handle gaming?

The MediaTek Dimensity 8300 (82nd percentile GPU) is fine for PUBG at 90fps on medium settings and casual titles, but it's not a powerhouse. Demanding games like Genshin Impact will need dialed-back graphics. It's more note-taker than gaming rig.

Who Should Skip This

If you value portability above all, the 620g weight and 12.7-inch footprint make this a two-handed device that's more mini-monitor than tablet. Commuters, one-handed readers, and anyone who works outside should look elsewhere; the dim 400-nit panel and chunky chassis will grate on you daily. Also, if you expect more than two years of security patches (Lenovo only promises until Android 16), steer clear.

Verdict

The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro nails the student brief: a massive, fast screen for split-screen notes, a pen that actually works well, and enough battery to survive a full campus day. The 400-nit display and 620g heft are real trade-offs, and the charging situation is a genuine hassle. But if you can find it for under $300 and don't mind babying the charger, it's a data-backed winner for readers, note-takers, and anyone who wants a tablet that feels more like a portable monitor. Just don't expect it to replace a laptop for raw performance or a Kindle for one-handed reading.

Usage Scores

Overall (76.4)Reading (81.8)Student (88.8)Business (81)Art Design (82.4)Productivity (81.1)Entertainment (78.9)

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