The most helpful thing you can add to any laptop for productivity is a second screen. That’s why I love laptops like the Asus Zenbook Duo. Its twin 14-inch OLED displays are attached by a redesigned hinge that now holds them closer together and on a single plane, for a more seamless look than previous models. The Zenbook Duo and its nearest rival look odd at first glance, but having a twin monitor setup available to you anywhere is incredibly handy. And so cool, too. Let them stare.
In addition to the new hinge, the 2026 Zenbook Duo gets Asus’ lightly textured Ceraluminum coating (which sounds silly but looks and feels great), a much larger battery, and — most importantly — a new Intel Panther Lake CPU. With this streamlined design, all-day battery life, and plentiful power, the Duo is a dual-screen that’s capable enough and versatile enough for most anyone.

$2300
The Good
- Lovely dual OLEDs that now sit closer together
- Versatile dual-screen form factor
- Still a great single-screen clamshell
- Strong performance and battery life
The Bad
- Gets warm, but not lap-roasting hot
- A little heavy and thick for a 14-inch
- Vertical orientation compromises sound quality
- Much pricier than last-gen
Our review configuration of the 2026 Zenbook Duo, which is due to launch sometime in Q1 2026, has an Intel Core Ultra X9 388H, 32GB of RAM, and 1TB of storage for $2,299.99. That’s $500 more than the last-gen model with similar specs.
- Screen: A
- Webcam: B
- Keyboard: B
- Trackpad: B
- Port selection: B
- Speakers: C
- Number of ugly stickers to remove: 3 (two are hidden, but that HDMI sticker is a crime)
I cover the Zenbook Duo’s performance at length in my dedicated Intel Panther Lake review, but the short version is that the Core Ultra X9 388H chip in this laptop is excellent, and it makes the Duo both powerful and power-efficient. It can handle heavy multitasking, breeze through content creation in Adobe apps, and even play games well in 1080p / 1200p resolution. It even delivers near-full-power performance when not plugged in — not often the case for Windows laptops.
The Zenbook Duo’s giant 99Wh battery lasted over 14 hours in our rundown test, and in everyday use I could easily get through an eight-to-nine-hour workday and then some while using both screens at fairly high brightness. I even ran it for six hours straight in dual-screen mode with both panels at 80 percent brightness without letting Windows 11’s aggressive power management suspend it or let it sleep, all while working across two virtual desktops in many Chrome tabs and with music playing on its solid-sounding speakers via Spotify. In those six hours it went from a full charge down to 24 percent. Impressive. And it lasts even longer when you use it like a standard clamshell laptop, with only one of its 14-inch 2880 x 1800 / 144Hz OLEDs active.
One of the Duo’s best tricks is that it can transform from a conventional 14-inch laptop to its towering dual-screen mode as quickly as you can rip the keyboard deck from its magnetic pogo pins and deploy the built-in kickstand. The keyboard and mechanical trackpad on the Duo are both great.


The keyboard’s typing feel is decently tactile, with a deep 1.7mm key travel. The trackpad has gesture controls at its edges that I found prone to accidental activation, so I turned them off in the MyAsus app. When detached, the keyboard deck works over Bluetooth for a claimed 11.6 hours of use with its backlight on. I never had to worry about keyboard battery life, as I switched to clamshell mode often enough to keep it topped up from the pogo pins — and you can also charge the keyboard via USB-C while it’s off the laptop.
The Zenbook Duo is a lot more travel-friendly than the 2024 Lenovo Yoga Book 9i: The Yoga Book’s stand is in a magnetic folio case, not built in; its keyboard doesn’t have a trackpad, and you can’t close the Yoga Book’s lid with the keyboard inside, so it and the mouse it ships with take up more room in your bag. The only tradeoffs of the Zenbook Duo design compared to the Lenovo are that it doesn’t fold over backward for tablet mode, and it’s a bit of a chunker at 3.65 pounds / 1.66 kg and nearly an inch thick at its hinge.
But I prefer the Zenbook Duo’s more conventional approach to dual-screen laptop life over the Yoga Book 9i. In addition to being more travel-friendly, the Duo has more ports and better port variety than the Lenovo, including a USB-A and full-size HDMI 2.1. The dual-screen Lenovo is also great, with unique style from its folio stand and bright blue color, but the Zenbook Duo is a tidier package.
As I found when I tested Lenovo’s rollable laptop, getting more screen real estate whenever you need will absolutely spoil you. Lots of people use portable monitors for this, but having your second screen integrated into your laptop and perfectly matched to the main screen in resolution, size, and color is better. There’s more room to tile apps and windows across your workspace, and it’s easier to work on two documents at the same time with side-by-side vertical screens — which is what I’m doing as I write this review. And with the screens in extra-tall orientation you get a nice webcam angle that’s closer to eye level, easier on your neck, and a more pleasing representation of your mug — no tickets to double-chin city here.
As awesome as this dual-screen experience is, you’re bound to run into little bits of friction. For example, I like turning the Duo’s orientation between horizontal and vertical depending on what I’m working on. But the two-up vertical position requires resting the laptop on its side, blocking some ports. Do I need my USB-A port for a mechanical keyboard or mouse dongle? Am I plugging into an external monitor via HDMI? Either of these means temporarily losing access to the other, and blocks half the Zenbook Duo’s six speakers, making music sound unbalanced and a little odd. Within Windows lie some quirks too: If you rest the Duo on its left edge, you have to change which display is the main screen in Settings, to keep the System Tray in the bottom right where it belongs. (Imagine using a center-aligned Start menu and a center-left-aligned System Tray? Madness.)


Asus’ ScreenXpert overlay software is designed to assist with dual-screen management. It’s helpful for things like simultaneously launching grouped apps across the two screens, but it’s still clunky and limited in scope. The same goes for all the multi-finger touch gestures you have to remember if you want to call up the virtual keyboard and trackpad or move them around the bottom screen. (My solution is to just not bother with the touch keyboard.)
But the odd, minor pain points are far outweighed by the usefulness and fun of the Zenbook Duo’s twin displays. It’s an incredibly versatile setup, and both performance and battery life are great. Asus nailed most aspects of the Zenbook Duo, making it an easy recommendation. Later in the year Asus will also bring a model with the same design, but a last-gen Arrow Lake H chip, which may be cheaper. And it’s also launching a dual-screen gaming laptop, the Zephyrus Duo, which I am really looking forward to. Dual-screen laptops remain niche for now, but the Zenbook Duo proves they shouldn’t be as rare as they are.
2026 Asus Zenbook Duo specs (as reviewed)
- Display: Dual 14-inch (2880 x 1800) 48 – 144Hz OLED touchscreens
- CPU: Intel Core Ultra X9 388H (Panther Lake)
- RAM: 32GB LPDDR5x
- Storage: 1TB PCIe 4.0 M.2 NVMe SSD
- Webcam: 1080p with IR
- Connectivity: Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4
- Ports: 2x Thunderbolt 4 / USB-C (up to 40Gbps with Power Delivery and DisplayPort), 1x USB-A 3.2 Gen 2, HDMI 2.1, 3.5mm combo audio jack
- Peripherals: Detachable keyboard/trackpad (Bluetooth/pogo pin), Asus Pen 3.0 stylus
- Biometrics: Windows Hello facial recognition
- Weight: 3.65 pounds / 1.66kg
- Dimensions: 12.21 x 8.21 x 0.77 – 0.92 inches / 310.18 x 208.66 x 19.6 – 23.34 mm
- Battery: 99Whr
- Price: $2,299.99








