Not every tablet is worth your attention, and not everyone needs the latest specs to achieve what they’re after. We’ve tested a multitude of tablets, all the way from the pre-iPad days, so we know what we’re talking about when we selected the products for this strict shortlist. Some of the most common issues with tablets can be poor build quality, unoptimised software – which is a particular issue on some Android tablets – and battery life that won’t last longer than a few episodes of telly. Your buying decision can get even more difficult when you consider that new tablets are coming out almost every month; Google has confirmed that it will be re-entering the tablet market with the Pixel Tablet, complete with big-screen-ready Android 12L software that should be coming early 2023. But if you’re interested in buying a new tablet right now, we’ve created this guide detailing the best tablets that are currently on the market. And if you can’t find what you’re looking for right now, bookmark this page and come back soon, as we’ll be updating this list whenever another great tablet comes through our doors. And if you’re looking for something that aligns with a specific brand, you can check out our best Fire tablet, best iPad and best Android tablet guides.

Best tablet at a glance

Reviewing the device, we struggled to find any serious issues with the tablet. Straight out of the box, the tablet presented the premium, well-built feeling that has assured iPad Air tablets have been consistent high scorers at Trusted Reviews. The metal finish feels nice to the touch and suffers no flex when pressed; following a fortnight with the device, and an accidental drop, our review unit remained free of any damage free. As a piece of hardware, it’s also excellent. In tests we found the iPad Air 2022 more than powerful enough for everyday use. Powered by Apple’s M1 chip, the same silicon seen in its MacBook Air M1 and the last gen Apple iPad Pro line, the tablet blasted through every process thrown its way. Every game we opened ran hassle-free, and the device never once heated up, even when tackling large-scale vector graphics work in Affinity Designer. Trust us when we say – despite being part of Apple’s Air, not Pro, line of tablets, this is a powerhouse performer. Apple’s iPadOS software is also significantly more developed than that of Android. During testing, we never struggled to find an app for the process we wanted to run. This makes it wonderfully flexible and suitable for use as a backup when paired with the option Apple Pencil and Magic Keyboard. The only minor issue is that, like all Apple peripherals, the keyboard and stylus are expensive additions. We also aren’t the biggest fans of the keyboard cover’s switches, which still feel a little squishy compared to most of the dedicated laptops we test. We’d only recommend it for taking notes during lectures, rather than for writing dissertations, as a result. The 11-inch screen is great for watching video content, offering suitably bright and accurate colours for an immersive viewing experience. Our reviewer was also impressed with the tablet’s speakers, which offered surprisingly powerful and detailed audio, to make watching TV in bed a blast. If that wasn’t enough, our tests showed that the iPad Air 4 is capable of offering users all-day battery life. Our reviewer regularly managed 10 hours of heavy use before the tablet required charging. Streaming 10 hours of a downloaded iTunes video, the battery still had 3% remaining during our tests. Our only slight quibble is that, unlike many of its Microsoft and Google rivals, the screen is a basic LCD panel with a locked 60Hz refresh rate. This means the device fell slightly short of delivering the deep blacks seen from its Pro Mini-LED siblings and Android rivals such as the Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra, which has an OLED screen. We’d also have liked Apple’s Promotion to make an appearance. Promotion is a screen technology that boosts the tablet’s refresh rate to 120Hz, enabling it to render twice as many images per second. The feature works great and, based on our experience, ensures the Pro screens feel much smoother to use than those of the Air models. Ordinarily, we’d have forgiven the Air considering its price; but, recently, we’ve seen rival devices at the same price, such as the Xiaomi Pad 5 with its 120Hz screen, pass through our labs. As such, the Xiaomi Pad 5 is a great alternative for those looking for an all-round awesome 11-inch tablet, but who aren’t embedded in Apple’s software ecosystem. Reviewer: Max ParkerFull review: iPad Air 2022 Review The screen is LCD, like the Air’s, but it has a faster 120Hz refresh rate. This made it much better for gaming, with our reviewer regularly running GeForce Now on the device on his lunch break during testing. The screen also features Dolby Vision HDR support, which, again, on paper gives it an edge over the Air. In real-world use the Xiaomi came close to matching the iPad Air as a home entertainment station. Colours looked wonderfully vibrant watching HDR content from Netflix, and the speakers, while not quite as controlled as the iPad Air’s, did a decent job of adding to the immersion felt when consuming content. The speakers can reach quite high volumes, and we didn’t detect any distortion, even when using the tablet at its max level. Distortion is a common issue across many of the mid-range Android tablets we test, such as the Galaxy Tab S7 FE. The Xiaomi Pad 5’s battery life is excellent, with our review unit matching the iPad Air 4 in offering around 10 hours of video playback in tests. This involved looping content stored on the device until battery life dropped to zero. Using the device as his primary tablet for a fortnight, our reviewer never once struggled to get a full week of regular use from the Pad 5. This entailed using it as an e-reader on his commute to work, and a web-browsing and media-consumption station through the evenings. Some minor issues that stopped us fully recommending the Pad 5 on the same level as the iPad Air relate to the device’s software and use of a slightly older Qualcomm Snapdragon 860 CPU. As is the case with nearly all the Android tablets we test, many apps aren’t optimised to run on screens of this size. As a result, we found most – including Facebook and Instagram – looked slightly stretched out on the Xiaomi Pad 5. In addition, software support for the Xiaomi isn’t as solid as that offered with the iPad; Xiaomi offers no firm pledges about how many updates it will guarantee for the Pad 5. This is a big deal – not receiving updates to the latest version of Android would radically shorten the Pad 5’s lifespan, diminishing its long-term appeal. By comparison, Apple iPads are updated to new versions of iPadOS so long as their hardware can run it. Reviewer: Alastair StevensonFull review: Xiaomi Pad 5 Review Out of the box, however, the tablet doesn’t scream gaming, with the black slate being blissfully free of any RGB lighting. In fact, our reviewer described the Windows tablet as looking a lot like a first-generation Microsoft Surface Pro, featuring a rugged but chunky tablet section with a reliable kickstand, which could easily see the device used in a lecture hall or coffee shop without drawing too much attention. Like all the Microsoft Windows tablets we test, the device is clearly designed to be used as a laptop first and tablet second. The kickstand and attachable keyboard, coupled with its large dimensions, make it a lot less comfortable to hold and use in landscape orientation than most Android or Apple iPad rivals. However, if a mobile PC gaming tablet that can double as a laptop for basic office tasks is what you’re after, it’s an excellent choice. The big differentiator between the Asus ROG Flow Z13 and the sea of other Windows tablets, including Microsoft’s current Surface Pro 8, is the fact that it comes with a dGPU option. Specifically, the review unit we tested was powered by an Intel Core i9-12900H CPU and an Nvidia RTX 3050 Ti GPU. There’s also a cheaper version available, which comes with a less powerful Intel Core i5-12500H and Intel Iris Xe graphics. The 3050 Ti GPU is a rarity – we haven’t seen it in any other tablet – and a clear sign of the tablet’s gaming focus, as well as the primary reason for its increased size. During testing, the combo saw the ROG Flow Z13 play games at surprisingly high frame rates. We managed to get big-name titles including Borderlands 3, Dirt Rally and Horizon Zero Dawn running at playable rates post-30fps, with the tablet set to a 1080p resolution during our time with the device. Less demanding titles, such as Fortnite and Apex Legends, ran much smoother and at times approached 60fps, again with graphics settings lowered. As a rule of thumb, games need to run at 30fps or higher – any lower and it will look like it’s chugging. As an added bonus the Z13 also has an external GPU option. This is an expensive peripheral that lets you radically boost game performance by connecting the Asus ROG Flow Z13 to an external XG Mobile dock containing a much more powerful RTX 3080 graphics card. Our tests showed the connection led to three times better performance when gaming. The only downside to the device is its high upfront cost, and the fact that some sacrifices have had to be made to accommodate the 3050 Ti graphics card. For starters, the keyboard isn’t as comfortable to use as the Type Cover available for the Surface Pro 8. In tests we found the Asus keyboard felt cramped, with its keys failing to offer as tactile feedback as the Surface’s keyboard – which itself isn’t perfect. The added graphical grunt also heavily impacted battery life. During our time with the Asus ROG Flow Z13, it never once managed to last more than five hours running productivity applications, and its battery would die in less than two hours while lightweight gaming. This is radically behind competing devices such as the Surface Pro 8, which managed to last a full work day (eight hours) when tested. We’d also suggest that any buyers simply looking for a way to play PC games on-the-go consider the Valve Steam Deck. In tests we found the Steam Deck, which comes with attached gamepad controls, managed to match the Asus ROG Flow Z13’s performance and offered longer battery life. The only downside is that it can’t be used as a laptop replacement in the same way as the Asus. Reviewer: Ryan JonesFull review: Asus ROG Flow Z13 Review As the Pro branding suggests, this is the top-end Apple tablet and it boasts the most features. It’s also available in two sizes: 11-inch and 12.9-inch, with the larger model toting the very best screen we’ve ever seen on tablet. In our tests, our reviewer was blown away by the display, with the Mini-LED 12.9-inch screen proving to be the best mobile panel for HDR content. We were wowed by the level of brightness on offer, and the accuracy of the colours displayed. The move to Mini-LED also made blacks look incrementally deeper than those rendered on the LCD iPad Pro M2 11-inch. Cracking out our colorimeter, our naked-eye impressions were confirmed, with the iPad Pro delivering one of the best performances we’ve seen for a tablet marketed at creatives. Our positive experience was further enhanced by the screen’s Promotion tech which is available on both sizes. This is Apple’s marketing term for high refresh rate and it means the iPad Pro M2 can display up to 120 images per second, up from 60 on the iPad Air. This makes everything feel a lot smoother, from drawing and sketching to gaming and scrolling Twitter. The M2 chip powering the device is more than powerful enough to easily run every app tested, with our reviewer noticing zero performance issues, even when editing video. However, there are limited apps out there that will fully take advantage of this chip – at least at the time of review. Reviewer: Max ParkerFull review: iPad Pro M2 The tablet was unveiled alongside the smaller Galaxy Tab S8 and Tab S8 Plus, which we’re yet to review, and is being marketed by Samsung as a direct rival to the iPad Pro.  The moment our reviewer took it out of the box it was apparent that Samsung has put all its eggs into the Ultra’s size and screen. Measuring in at 14 inches, the Ultra is the biggest tablet on this list and – aside from the Wacom Mobile Studio Pro – the largest tablet to pass through our labs. It took our reviewer a good two days to get used to the tablet’s generous proportions, and the lack of a kickstand means you’ll 100% need to invest in a case to fully take advantage of all the tablet has to offer. All-in-all, If you want a satchel-friendly tablet that can easily be used one-handed, this definitely isn’t the tablet for you. But, if you want a big screen for immersive video streaming or GeForce Now cloud gaming sessions then we couldn’t recommend the Ultra enough. On powering up the tablet, its screen immediately proved to be one of the best we’ve seen on an Android tablet for media consumption. The 14.6-inch AMOLED panel is wonderful for watching video and playing games, the AMOLED tech presenting perfect blacks. This, coupled with solid brightness, saw this tablet deliver the best HDR performance we’ve seen from an Android tablet. Streaming BladeRunner, details lost in dark scenes on the older Galaxy Tab S7 Plus and Xiaomi Pad 5 were on full display here. Add to this detailed audio from its speakers, and you have a wonderfully immersive viewing experience. The tablet also features a top 120Hz refresh rate, which is great for gaming. Streaming games over the cloud with a Razer Raiju controller connected, the large screen offered fantastic reactive gameplay in 1440p, making it a great option for gamers looking for a tablet to play on when away from the TV. This was aided by the Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra’s solid battery life, with the tablet generally offering three-plus-hours of gaming over the cloud – more generous than the two hours we achieved using the Asus ROG Flow Z13. The only downside is that you’ll need a reliable 5G or Wi-Fi connection; the tablet’s Android software means you can’t access key gaming marketplaces, such as Steam, for local triple-A gaming. Despite its size, and the fact it comes with an S Pen stylus included, we’d recommend creatives and power users on the hunt for a laptop replacement opt for the iPad Pro 12.9-inch or Surface Pro 8 instead. Although the Tab S8 Ultra’s screen is great for entertainment, our colorimeter tests show that it doesn’t cover as much of the Adobe and DCI-P3 colour gamuts as the iPad Pro. Specifically, it covered only 72.1% of the sRGB and 74.7% of the DCI-P3 gamuts. This puts it roughly on a par with the Surface Pro 8, but behind the iPad Pro 12.9-inch. Ideally, we’d want any screen designed for creatives to cover at least 80% of these gamuts. Gamuts are ranges of colours used to gauge how accurately images rendered on a screen are compared to how they will look when physically printed. We didn’t get a chance to test the tablet’s official keyboard cover, but we found that Android’s offering of creative and productivity apps isn’t on a par with iPad OS or Windows 11. The Adobe creative suite on Android is a cut-down version designed for mobile phones, not the full fat version you’ll find on iPad OS or Windows, limited to basic filters, cropping and repair functionality. Krita also remains the only painting app that’s properly optimised for stylus inputs and with proper keyboard shortcut support. Reviewer: Alastair StevensonFull review: Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra Review The tablet uses proper laptop processors and has access to every app and programme available on Windows. As such, our reviewer found that it was the only device on the list that could comfortably be used both as a 100% functional laptop for work and tablet for entertainment. With every other device, including the iPad models, we experienced times where we had to move to a laptop to complete some work tasks. This usually occurred when we needed to plug peripherals such as colorimeter or older external monitors into the device, because iPadOS and Android had failed to recognise them. Paired with a Type Cover, we also found the keyboard is one of the best available to a tablet. The new keyboard has a carbon fibre layer, which makes it feel a lot sturdier to type on, removing the flex I experienced with past Type Covers. The key’s switches also have a more pleasing and tactile actuation point than Apple’s Magic Keyboards, making it more comfortable to work on for prolonged periods. As an added perk, the keyboard also has a dock for the Slim Pen. This sits on its top long side and has a clever magnetic mechanism that charges and hides the pen when the tablet section is attached. The system is much more elegant than the magnetic docking systems seen on the Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra and iPad Pro. From a hardware perspective, the Surface Pro 8 performed admirably. The 13-inch tablet uses an LCD panel, which means it wasn’t quite as nice as the Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra and iPad Pro 12.9-inch to watch Netflix on, which offer deeper blacks and generally more immersive viewing head-to-head. Nevertheless, screen quality is more than good enough for casual viewing on the go. I had no serious issues watching videos on a long train ride to Scotland. The lack of a dGPU, like the 3050 Ti seen on the Asus ROG Flow Z13, meant we couldn’t get triple-A games to run locally at playable frame rates without radically downgrading the graphics. But the 120Hz refresh rate meant streaming games via GeForce Now felt suitably reactive with an Xbox controller connected. During our review process we found battery life varied greatly, depending on what you were doing with the device. For office tasks such as word processing, video calling and managing excel sheets, you’ll comfortably get a full work day’s use out of the Surface Pro 8, based on our experience with the device. But more intensive tasks, such as 3D modelling in Blender put a much bigger strain on the battery, with it lasting only around 3-4 hours. This is a lot less than the iPad Pro 12.9-inch. The screen’s colour gamut coverage also isn’t quite up to scratch for creatives, based on our colorimeter checks. We found it covers only 73.4% of the Adobe RGB and 75.7% of the DCI-P3 gamuts favoured by creatives that work in physical media. This means the iPad Pro 12.9-inch will be a better option for most painters, photographers and designers. Reviewer: Alastair StevensonFull review: Surface Pro 8 Review We haven’t always been the biggest fans of Apple’s Mini iPads, with them tending to be the slowest to get upgraded in any significant way. The iPad Mini 5 offered a good but dull design that focussed on performance improvements and little more. Which is the reason we were so surprised by the iPad Mini 6 when it entered our labs for testing. It was immediately apparent on taking the device out of the box that Apple had put much thought and care into upgrading the Mini for today’s market. The device sports a completely new, more modern design, and a number of small but important upgrades make it the best small tablet to pass through our labs in the last half decade. Design-wise, it looks like a shrunk-down version of Apple’s current-generation Pro and Air tablets. It’s been upgraded to feature Apple Pencil 2 support, too. The latter is particularly welcome, since it means the Pencil can be magnetically docked and charged on the tablet. The docking mechanism is much more elegant than that featured on the older model – which forced you to charge the Pencil using the tablet’s Lightning port – and made it far easier for us to keep tabs on the stylus through testing. The A15 Bionic chipset isn’t as fast as the M1 that features in Apple’s more expensive iPads, but based on our benchmarks and experience using the Mini 6 as our daily tablet, it’s still more than powerful enough. In our time with the tablet, we never noticed any slowdown, with apps universally launching in milliseconds and running with zero performance issues. The only downside is that while the size is great for people who want a portable tablet, the Mini isn’t quite as good for video streaming or gaming in a home environment as its larger Air sibling. We found the 8.2-inch screen isn’t anywhere near as immersive for video viewing as the iPad Air, let alone the Pro or Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra. As well as its small size, placing it next to the iPad Air, which also has an LCD screen, blacks weren’t quite as deep. Thankfully, its high max brightness meant it proved suitably dynamic for casual video in bed or while travelling. The lack of Apple’s Promotion tech means it’s locked at a bog-standard 60Hz refresh rate. This coupled with its small size meant that although it’s fine for mobile gaming on-the-go, the device is ill-suited for more serious players looking for a tablet from which to stream triple-A games. We found the HUD and text on PC games running via GeForce Now were a little too small to comfortably read when the tablet was sitting on a desk. For such users, the iPad Air or Xiaomi Pad 5 with their larger screens are far better options. Reviewer: Max ParkerFull review: Apple iPad Mini 6 review The hardware is fairly basic. The 10-inch LCD screen looks washed out next to the panels of the iPad Air and Xiaomi Pad 5, but is sharp enough to read comfortably and fine for watching cartoons. Apps take noticeably longer to load; but the FireOS software is great for kids. During testing we found that the advanced parental controls make it quick and easy to filter what content kids can access, restrict or block in-app purchases and limit how much screen time they get each day. The childish design and restricted software also mean you’ll likely want to avoid the tablet if you have slightly older kids. We’d recommend parents with kids aged 9 and above look at a lower-end, full-fat Android tablet such as the Galaxy Tab S7 FE, which offers a more adult design and access to Google’s full application ecosystem. The 10.9-inch screen is good but is rather let down by the lack of laminated protection against sunglare, though we have no such reservations about the impressive processing power, which is more than capable enough to deal with mobile games and more. It also supports handy accessories such as the Apple Pencil and the Magic Folio keyboard. Battery life is also reliably strong, easily lasting through ten hours of video usage, and of course you can count on Apple’s brilliant software to function very smoothly and give you access to an enormous library of great apps. 2,316 Tablet