Affiliate links

HP OmniBook 7 Aero 13-bg Hands-on: Under 2.2 lbs and ready for daily carry — a well-balanced travel laptop

Takumi
By Takumi A laptop reviewer with over 10 years in the game and 100+ machines tested. Takumi specializes in cutting through the spec sheet noise to match you with the right laptop for the way you actually work.
HP
OmniBook 7 Aero 13-bg
Under 2.2 lbs and ready for daily carry — a well-balanced travel laptop
ZippyScore 4.5/5
Buy if:
  • ·You carry your laptop everywhere and want something that doesn't weigh you down
  • ·You need a solid machine for writing papers, browsing, and video calls
  • ·You work from coffee shops, campus, or anywhere outside your desk
Avoid if:
  • ·You need serious gaming or video editing performance — this isn't built for that
  • ·You spend long days away from an outlet and need all-day battery life

Hey, I'm Takumi from ZippyLaptop. I've had the HP OmniBook 7 Aero 13-bg in my hands, and here's my honest take — what I loved, what annoyed me, and who I'd recommend it to.

A note: this hands-on is based on the Japan-market unit. Keyboard layout, language preset, and bundled software may differ in your region.

Note: This review is based on the Japan-market model. Actual specs, colors, and availability may vary in your region.

ZippyScore

ZippyScore is a proprietary rating based on 6 criteria: performance, portability, display, battery, value, and connectivity.

See rating criteria
  • Performance: CPU / GPU performance
  • Portability: Screen size & weight
  • Display: Panel type, aspect ratio & refresh rate
  • Battery: Rated battery life
  • Value: Specs-to-price balance
  • Connectivity: Port types & count
ZippyScore
4.5 / 5
Performance 3.7
Portability 4.9
Display 3.9
Battery 3.5
Value 4.5
Connectivity 3.6

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Under 2.2 lbs — light enough to carry every single day without thinking about it
  • 16GB+ RAM handles multitasking without breaking a sweat
  • A solid processor keeps everyday tasks feeling snappy and responsive
  • Great port selection — you won't be hunting for a dongle
  • Biometric face login gets you in instantly

Cons

  • Fan noise gets noticeable under heavy load
  • Battery is on the smaller side — you'll want to find a plug if you're out all day

Specs Summary

OSWindows 11 Home
CPUAMD Ryzen AI 5 340 (PassMark: 19,609)
AMD Ryzen AI 7 350 (PassMark: 24,959)
RAM16GB / 32GB
Storage512GB / 1TB
Display13.3" IPS (Anti-glare, 60Hz)
1920x1200 (16:10)
13.3" IPS (Anti-glare, 60Hz)
2560x1600 (16:10)
Weight0.97 kg (2.14 lbs)
PortsUSB-C × 2 (10Gbps/PD/Video out/ver.2.1), USB-A × 1 (10Gbps), USB-A × 1 (5Gbps), HDMI × 1 (ver.2.1), Headphone jack × 1
GPUAMD Radeon 840M (G3D Mark: 3,805)
AMD Radeon 860M (G3D Mark: 4,882)
BiometricsFace Recognition
BatteryUp to 15.5 h
DimensionsApprox. 297 × 211 × 17.4 mm (W × D × H)
Wi-FiWi-Fi 6E
BluetoothBluetooth 5.3
ColorCeramic White / Glacier Silver

Hands-on Review

A note: this hands-on is based on the Japan-market unit. Keyboard layout, language preset, and bundled software may differ in your region.

Here's my full hands-on review of the OmniBook 7 Aero 13-bg. The unit I tested had the following specs:

Spec Review Unit
CPU AMD Ryzen AI 7 350
RAM 32GB
Storage 1024GB SSD
Display 13.3-inch IPS (1920×1200, 60Hz)
Graphics AMD Radeon 860
Color Ceramic White

*Specs may vary by region and retailer.

Design

The review unit came in Ceramic White — and it genuinely stands out. In a laptop market full of silver and black, this one catches eyes. Pull it out at a coffee shop or on campus and it reads as "person with taste." Especially solid choice for college students who want their setup to look as good as it performs.

OmniBook 7 Aero 13-bg front view in Ceramic WhiteCeramic White front panel

The lid is also Ceramic White and looks clean — but I'll be straight: it's plastic. Does it feel premium? Not really. That said, it's a fair trade-off for a sub-2.2 lb chassis. Lightweight machines make compromises somewhere, and the build material is where this one makes its.

OmniBook 7 Aero 13-bg rear lid in whiteWhite on the back too

It's genuinely slim — slides right into a bag without fighting it. Passes the thin-laptop test easily.

OmniBook 7 Aero 13-bg slim profileImpressively thin profile

The rubber feet grip reasonably well, but because the chassis is so light, aggressive typing can shift the laptop around a bit. Worth knowing if you're a heavy typer.

Rubber feet on the bottomRubber feet provide grip

The lid notch makes it easy to open, but because the laptop is so light, one-handed opening tends to lift the whole machine. You'll want to get into the habit of holding down the base.

Opening the lidOpening the lid

Portability

Real-world weight came in at exactly 1,000g (2.2 lbs), just a hair over the 970g spec — but that's noise. Either way, this is legitimately light for a laptop. You won't notice it on the daily commute or between classes.

Scale showing 1000gReal-world weight: 1,000g (2.2 lbs)

The charger, though, measured 323g (~11 oz). Kind of defeats the purpose of a featherweight laptop. When you're out, swap it for a compact USB-C charger from Anker or similar — your bag will thank you.

Charger weight 323gThe charger weighs 323g (~11 oz)

One-handing it around campus or the office is effortless. Even on days when your bag is packed, you'll grab this without thinking twice.

Holding the laptop in one handNo effort required for one-handed carry

Display Quality

The IPS panel delivers solid, accurate color — not in a "budget IPS" way either. Colors look genuine, and the slim bezels give it a clean modern look.

Vibrant display colorsPunchy, accurate colors
Slim bezels on OmniBook 7 AeroClean slim bezels

Viewing angles are wide — typical of a good IPS. Colors hold up well from the side, so sharing the screen is no problem.

Wide viewing anglesSolid viewing angles

No touchscreen, for those who want that.

Resolution is 1920×1200 with a 16:10 aspect ratio. That extra vertical real estate means less scrolling on webpages and more rows visible in spreadsheets. It's one of those things you don't notice until you go back to a 16:9 screen and wonder why everything feels cramped.

16:10 vs 16:9 comparisonMore vertical space than a standard 16:9 display

The matte panel keeps reflections minimal. Even under harsh indoor lighting, glare is a non-issue.

Minimal reflections on the matte displayLow reflections — matte panel does its job

Keyboard Feel

HP has been putting real effort into keyboard layouts lately, and it shows here. Key placement feels natural, and if you're switching from another laptop the adjustment period is minimal. The Enter key shape in particular is spot on.

Well-laid-out keyboardThoughtful key layout

Typing feel is light — don't expect a ThinkPad-style click. But for a thin lightweight it's comfortable. Fine for banging out assignments at a coffee shop.

Light typing feel on keyboardLight but comfortable typing feel

Backlight has two brightness levels plus always-on. Typing in the dark is no problem.

Keyboard backlight onBacklight keeps keys visible in the dark

Trackpad

Smooth and accurate — the trackpad is a strong point here. Size is generous for a 13-inch class laptop, and you'll rarely feel the need to reach for a mouse when you're on the go.

Smooth trackpad surfaceSmooth, accurate trackpad

Three-finger gestures work fluidly. Window switching and swiping feel natural. Honestly, "I don't need my mouse today" is a realistic outcome.

Three-finger gesture supportGestures feel fluid and natural

Performance

PCMark 10 score: 6946. For a lightweight mobile laptop, that's genuinely impressive. Running multiple browser tabs while on a video call, crunching through spreadsheets — this handles all of it without breaking a sweat. You'll be hard-pressed to feel the machine struggling in everyday use.

PCMark 10 Score Guide
Total Score Rating What it feels like in real use
~4,000 Bare minimum Web browsing and simple tasks work, but multitasking or many tabs feels sluggish.
4,000–5,000 Light use Daily tasks are doable, but running multiple apps means waiting around.
5,000–6,500 Comfortable (mainstream) Handles most work without stress — fine for office, school, video calls.
6,500–8,000 High performance This PC Plenty of headroom. Light photo editing and programming feel snappy.
8,000+ Very high performance Tackles video editing and heavy workloads. Long-lasting performance.

*PCMark 10 reflects overall comfort. Actual feel depends on CPU, RAM, and SSD speed.


PCMark 10 score of 6946PCMark 10: 6946

Cinebench 2026 multi-thread score: 3002. Solid number — light photo editing and typical creative work are fair game.

Cinebench 2026 Multi-core Score Guide
Score Rating What it feels like in real use
Up to 1,000 Bare minimum Light tasks work, but heavier processing or multitasking feels constrained.
1,000–2,000 Standard (power-efficient) Handles daily tasks, but heavier loads create waiting.
2,000–3,000 Comfortable (mainstream) Office, school, video calls all work comfortably. Plenty for most users.
3,000–4,000 High performance This PC Comfortable for multitasking, light/medium editing, and dev work.
4,000+ Very high performance Handles video editing and heavy workloads with room to spare.

*Cinebench 2026 is the latest CPU multi-core benchmark. Scores trend lower than R23, so direct comparison isn't valid.


Cinebench 2026 scoreCinebench 2026 score

3DMark Steel Nomad Lite: 2351. Not bad for integrated graphics — casual gaming is possible. Don't expect AAA titles to run well, but lighter games are doable.

3DMark Steel Nomad Light Score Guide
Score Rating What it feels like in real use
Up to 400 Bare minimum 3D performance is quite limited. Not really suited for gaming.
400–900 Light 3D Lighter games and low-load 3D processing work.
900–1,500 Average (mainstream) Standard for integrated GPUs. Light to medium games playable with right settings.
1,500–2,200 High performance Strong for an integrated GPU. Games and 3D work feel comfortable.
2,200+ Very high performance This PC Top-tier 3D performance for thin laptops. Real graphics headroom.

*3DMark Steel Nomad Light targets thin laptops and integrated GPUs. Score range differs from Time Spy, so direct comparison isn't valid.


3DMark Steel Nomad Lite score3DMark Steel Nomad Lite

CrystalDiskMark read speed: 6119 MB/s. That's fast. App launches and large file transfers finish quickly, and you won't be staring at a loading bar.

CrystalDiskMark Sequential Read Guide
Score Rating What it feels like in real use
Up to 600 MB/s Bare minimum Faster than HDD, but slow for modern SSDs. App launches feel slightly slow.
600–1,500 MB/s Average Fine for daily use, though loading is noticeably slower than top-tier SSDs.
1,500–3,500 MB/s Comfortable (mainstream) App launches and file loading feel smooth. No real complaints in daily use.
3,500–5,500 MB/s Fast Loads large data and apps quickly. Definitely upper-tier SSD speed.
5,500+ MB/s Very fast This PC High-end NVMe territory. Heavy data work without waiting.

*CrystalDiskMark measures SSD speed. It mainly affects app launch and file loading speed, not overall PC performance.


CrystalDiskMark read speed 6119 MB/sSSD read speed: 6,119 MB/s

Battery Life

Battery rating: Average

Battery capacity is 43 Wh — standard for a slim mobile build. HP claims up to 15.5 hours, but your mileage may vary depending on workload. For light browsing and writing, you'll get a solid workday out of it. Add heavy loads or video streaming and drain picks up. If you've got a long day out, plan for a plug.

Battery report showing 43 WhBattery capacity: 43 Wh

If the charger weight bugs you — and it should — a compact USB-C charger is the move. The laptop is light; your charger can be too.

Compact USB-C chargerSwap in a compact USB-C charger

Fan Noise & Heat

At idle, it's essentially silent. Library-quiet. You won't think about the fan during normal use.

Fan barely audible at idleBarely a whisper at idle

Under load it hits 39 dB — you'll hear it. In a quiet room with sustained heavy work, it's noticeable. But the fan only spins up when it needs to, and it does keep the system cool.

39 dB fan noise under load39 dB under heavy load

Exhaust vents are on the underside, pointing backward. Hot air goes away from your hands — no sweaty palm problem during long sessions.

Exhaust vent on the undersideExhaust goes out the bottom — away from your hands

Ports

Left side: USB-A and a headphone jack. Right side: HDMI, USB-A, and a USB-C port with DisplayPort Alt Mode and Power Delivery. One cable for video out or charging — no adapters needed for most setups.

Left side ports: USB-A and headphone jackLeft side ports
Right side ports: HDMI, USB-A, USB-CRight side ports

4K monitor output via HDMI confirmed. Plug in a cable before a presentation and it just works.

4K monitor output confirmed4K output via HDMI — confirmed

Dual 4K output via USB-C also confirmed. At home or the office, you can run a full desktop setup with two big monitors, then unplug and take the laptop with you. Good bang for your buck if that's your workflow.

Dual 4K output via USB-CDual 4K output via USB-C

Webcam

Camera quality is better than expected at this price. Bright and clear — you won't look washed out or blurry on video calls.

Webcam image quality sampleClear, bright webcam output

Physical privacy shutter is a nice touch. Slide it over and the camera is physically blocked — more reassuring than any software toggle.

Physical privacy shutterPhysical shutter — the real deal

Speakers

Audio has decent bass presence and sounds clear enough for streaming. Watching movies or shows on Amazon Prime without headphones is totally fine. For a thin travel laptop, the speakers punch above their weight.

Speaker grilleSurprisingly solid audio for the size

Security

Face unlock works well — open the lid, look at the screen, and you're in. It's nearly instant. Honestly wasn't expecting it to be this snappy.

No fingerprint sensor, but face unlock at this speed makes it a non-issue. For a laptop at this price point, the login experience is genuinely good.

Verdict

The OmniBook 7 Aero 13-bg pulls off a solid balancing act: around 1 kg (2.2 lbs), a PCMark 10 score of 6946, 32GB of RAM, and a blazing-fast SSD. For a daily-carry laptop, that's a compelling lineup. The plastic lid and 43 Wh battery are the honest downsides — but if your priority is a lightweight machine that actually performs, this one makes a strong case.

✅ Buy it if you...

  • Carry your laptop every single day and want something that doesn't weigh you down
  • Need a solid machine for writing papers, browsing, and video calls
  • Work from coffee shops, campus, or anywhere that isn't your desk

⚠️ Skip it if you...

  • Need serious gaming or video editing performance
  • Spend long days out away from a charger

Under 2.2 lbs and ready for daily carry — a well-balanced travel laptop

Where to Buy

Where to Buy

Amazon See price on site

* Prices may vary. Please check each store for the latest price and availability.

About the author

Takumi
Takumi
Editor-in-Chief, ZippyLaptop / Laptop Review Specialist

Takumi is a gadget blogger who lives and breathes laptop reviews and comparisons.
With 100+ notebooks put through their paces, his evaluations go way beyond raw specs — he focuses on what it actually feels like to use a machine day in and day out.
He has a particular knack for use-case-driven recommendations: whether you're a college student on a budget, a road warrior who needs something ultraportable, or a professional who demands serious performance, Takumi breaks it all down by weighing CPU horsepower, weight, battery life, display quality, and more into a single clear verdict.
Here on ZippyLaptop, every review is powered by the proprietary 'ZippyScore' system — a six-category framework covering Performance, Portability, Display, Battery, Value, and Connectivity — so you can compare laptops on an apples-to-apples basis.
His mission is simple: make the laptop-buying process less overwhelming. Whether this is your first PC purchase or your tenth, Takumi's goal is to leave you feeling confident and informed, not confused.

HP OmniBook 7 Aero 13-bg HP
OmniBook 7 Aero 13-bg