The HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 is the direct successor to the beloved Spectre x360, and it inherits everything that made that line great: a dazzling OLED, a remarkably thin chassis, a class-leading keyboard and the best webcam on any laptop. Digital Trends called it the best 2-in-1 convertible you can buy. It runs efficient Lunar Lake silicon with 10-plus-hour battery life. Watch for HP's bundled bloatware.

Full review
Real-World Performance
HP killed the Spectre x360 name and reincarnated it as the OmniBook Ultra Flip 14, and the move was largely about swapping to Intel's efficient Lunar Lake silicon. The Core Ultra 7 256V (with a 47 TOPS NPU for Copilot+ features) delivers smooth, responsive performance for everyday productivity, and Digital Trends went so far as to call it 'the best 2-in-1 convertible you can buy.' PCWorld was more measured, framing it as 'a solid 2-in-1 that gets the job done' for buyers who 'can get behind the idea of efficiency over power', an accurate summary of the Lunar Lake value proposition.
Battery life is a strong suit, with reviewers consistently reporting 10 to 11 hours of real-world use, more than enough for a full workday. As with the Yoga 9i and the other Lunar Lake machines in this roundup, the OmniBook trades peak multi-core and GPU performance for that efficiency, so it is not a machine for heavy rendering or gaming. For writing, browsing, video calls and light creative work, it is quick and quiet.
Build Quality and Design
This is where the OmniBook Ultra Flip shines, and where its Spectre lineage is most obvious. Reviewers across the board describe it as remarkably thin and light, with Digital Trends noting it is 'as nicely designed as any' premium laptop and Live Science calling the chassis 'light and sophisticated.' The build is genuinely thinner and lighter than the Spectre x360 it replaces, a notable achievement given it keeps a full 14-inch screen and a 360-degree hinge.
Two features draw particular praise. The keyboard is widely rated as one of the best on any convertible, and the 9MP webcam is, by multiple accounts, the best built-in camera on any laptop, a real advantage for anyone who lives in video calls. HP bundles a stylus for tablet-mode inking, and the laptop carries two Thunderbolt 4 ports for fast external connectivity. The fit and finish are squarely premium, putting it shoulder to shoulder with the Lenovo Yoga 9i on construction quality.
Display and OLED Quality
The OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 ships with a single but excellent display option: a 14-inch 2.8K (2880x1800) OLED running at up to 120Hz. Digital Trends and TechRadar both singled the panel out as the standout feature, with TechRadar calling the 3K OLED 'a dazzling display' and praising the responsive touchscreen and included stylus. Deep OLED blacks, vivid color and the high refresh rate make it a superb screen for both media and creative work.
Live Science summed up the appeal by calling the whole package 'breathtaking,' led by that OLED. The display is on par with the best in this group, trading blows with the Lenovo Yoga 9i's panel, though the Yoga edges it on peak brightness with its 1,100-nit HDR rating. Against the larger 16-inch screens on the Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro 360 and HP OmniBook X Flip 16, the OmniBook's 14-inch panel is smaller but more portable, and its color and contrast are first-rate.
Where It Falls Short
The most consistent complaint is software. Reviewers flagged a noticeable amount of HP bloatware out of the box, and TechRadar's verdict was effectively that it is a 'premium laptop winner, after you disable the bloatware.' The Copilot+ AI features that the NPU enables also remain limited in everyday usefulness, especially with Microsoft repeatedly delaying flagship features like Recall, so the AI-PC branding currently delivers less than it promises.
Performance is the other caveat, and it is the same story as the rest of this Lunar Lake group: efficiency over power. Reviewers were clear that at its price you are paying primarily for the design, the OLED and the webcam rather than processing muscle. Anyone needing serious compute or graphics will be better served by a different class of machine, and value-focused buyers may balk at paying premium money for a laptop whose chip is tuned for battery life rather than speed.
Who It's Best For
The OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 is ideal for anyone who loved the Spectre x360 and wants its spiritual successor: a thin, beautifully built 14-inch convertible with a gorgeous OLED, an excellent keyboard and the best webcam on any laptop. Remote workers who live on video calls get a genuine, tangible benefit from that 9MP camera that no other laptop here matches.
It is less suited to buyers who want raw performance, a larger screen, or the lowest price. Power users should look beyond Lunar Lake convertibles entirely; those wanting a 16-inch canvas should consider the Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro 360 or HP OmniBook X Flip 16; and budget shoppers will find the HP OmniBook X Flip 16 or Lenovo Yoga 7i cheaper. But as a premium 14-inch convertible, it is a near-tie with the Yoga 9i, landing at number two here mainly on the Yoga's brighter screen and rotating-soundbar versatility.
Value at This Price
At around $1,199, the OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 is positioned just below the Lenovo Yoga 9i and Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro 360 and above the cheaper Yoga 7i and HP OmniBook X Flip 16. Reviewers were candid that the price buys design, display and that standout webcam rather than horsepower, which makes it excellent value for buyers who prioritize portability, build quality and video-call quality, and weaker value for anyone chasing performance per dollar. Several noted it inherits most of what made the Spectre x360 great for several hundred dollars less than that line once commanded, which strengthens the case. Factor in the bloatware you will want to strip out, and it remains a compelling premium pick, just one whose value proposition rewards a specific buyer rather than everyone.
Strengths
- +Dazzling 14-inch 2.8K/3K OLED at up to 120Hz
- +Remarkably thin and light chassis, the successor to the Spectre x360
- +Excellent battery life, consistently 10-11 hours in testing
- +Best-in-class 9MP webcam and a superb keyboard
- +Two Thunderbolt 4 ports and a bundled stylus
Watch-outs
- −Notable HP software bloat out of the box
- −Copilot+ AI appeal still limited in practice
- −Lunar Lake performance is efficiency-first, not powerhouse
- −You pay for design and display more than raw speed
How it compares
The HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 is the closest rival to the Lenovo Yoga 9i 2-in-1 at the premium end, matching it on OLED quality and thinness while adding a far better 9MP webcam, though the Yoga 9i's rotating soundbar hinge and 1,100-nit panel edge ahead. It is more portable than the 16-inch Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro 360 and HP OmniBook X Flip 16, and better-finished than the cheaper Lenovo Yoga 7i.
Who this is for
At a glance: Buyers who want a thin, beautifully built 14-inch premium convertible with the best laptop webcam, especially former Spectre x360 fans.
Why you’d buy the HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14
- Dazzling 14-inch 2.8K/3K OLED at up to 120Hz.
- Remarkably thin and light chassis, the successor to the Spectre x360.
- Excellent battery life, consistently 10-11 hours in testing.
Why you’d skip it
- Notable HP software bloat out of the box.
- Copilot+ AI appeal still limited in practice.
- Lunar Lake performance is efficiency-first, not powerhouse.
Rating sources
“The OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 is as nicely designed as any of them; it is the best 2-in-1 convertible you can buy.”
“This is a stunning laptop in almost every way, with a fantastic OLED display, a light and sophisticated chassis, and a great battery.”
“If you're looking for a solid 2-in-1 that gets the job done and you can get behind the idea of efficiency over power, then the HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 is worth your consideration.”
Our 4.6 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.



