Pros
Elegant, lightweight design
Bright, vibrant 4K display
Good performance
Comfortable keyboard
Cons
No legacy ports
Below-average battery life
Dell XPS 13 pricing and configuration
I spent a considerable amount of time with the $1,800 model of the Dell XPS 13. It’s outfitted with a 3.0-GHz Intel Core i7-1185G7 processor with 16GB of RAM, a 512GB M.2 PCIe NVMe SSD with an Intel Iris Xe Graphics with a 13.4-inch, 3840 x 2400-pixel touch panel.
The $879 base model has a 3.0-GHz Intel i3-1115G4 processor with 8GB of RAM, a 256GB M.2 PCIe NVMe SSD with an Intel UHD Graphics with a 13.4-inch, 1920 x 1200 non-touch screen.
The $2,155 top-tier configuration doubles the RAM to 32GB and the storage to a 1TB M.2 PCIe NVMe SSD.
Available On Amazon.com
Dell XPS 13 design
It’s still pretty as a picture. While I prefer the XPS 13’s Frost White finish, I’m never going to kick the old-school platinum silver and black color scheme out of bed. The silver lid has a slight pearlescence that draws and keeps your attention and works nicely with the glossy Dell logo stamped in the center of the lid. The sides of the laptops are also shiny thanks to the beveled edges.
And once you open the lid, you get that familiar yet appealing black carbon-fiber keyboard deck. The majority of the palm rest is occupied by a massive palm rest while the rest of the deck houses the full-sized keyboard. The powerbutton in the top-right corner also doubles as the fingerprint reader.
At 2.8 pounds, the 11.6 x 7.8 x 0.6-inch XPS 13 is still one of the lightest premium laptops on the market, matched only by the 13-inch Apple MacBook Pro M1 (2.8 pounds, 11.9 x 8.4 x 0.2-0.6 inches). The Asus ROG Flow X13 (11.8 x 8.7 x 0.6) is slightly heavier at 2.9 pounds, making the Lenovo Yoga 9i (12.6 x 8.5 x 0.6 inches) and HP Spectre x360 14 (12 x 8.7 x 0.7 inches) the heavyweights at an even three pounds.
Dell XPS 13 ports
Dell XPS 13 display
I love a good 4K display and the Dell XPS 13 is serving up all the goodies: crisp details and great color with plenty of brightness. And thanks to Dell’s InfinityEdge barely-there bezels, the XPS has one of the highest resolutions available at 3840 x 2400-pixels.
While watching the “Tazmanian Devil” trailer, I was taken with the deep, vibrant colors and clean details. For instance, the striations on the wooden door were just as clear as roses on actor Dayo Ayodele’s red-and-white hoodie, despite being covered in bright green paint.
Dell pre-installed its CinemaColor software on the system to adjust the panel’s color temperature. The utility offers four presets (Movie, Evening, Sports and Animation). Out of the four, I prefer Animation as it gives the most vivid hues.
The colors looked so good, I was surprised that its 76.9% DCI-P3 color gamut fell short of the 85.4% premium laptop average. However, the XPS 13’s score is better than the X13 (69.9%) and the Yoga 9i (76%). But the MacBook Pro and Spectre x360 14 (OLED) were more vivid with results of 78.3% and 139.7%, respectively.
The XPS 13 managed to outshine the competition at an average 442 nits. The MacBook Pro came the closest at 435 nits while the Spectre (339 nits), Yoga 91 (334 nits) and Flow X13 (282 nits) looked dim by comparison.
The capacitive touch panel is both agile and accurate, keeping pace with my rudimentary drawing skill in Paint.
Dell XPS 13 audio
The Dell XPS 13’s side-mounted speakers are far louder than I expected. With an assist from the pre-installed Waves MaxxAudio Pro software, the laptop had no problem filling my smallish living and dining room area. When I listened to “Leave The Door Open” by Silk Sonic, the soundscape was somewhat crowded, making it hard to identify some of the instruments on the track outside of the drums, piano and horns. Still, the vocals were as smooth as the band’s name suggests.
The MaxxAudio Pro software gives you a lot of customization options, including 24 presets and toggles for MaxxBass, Details, Midnight and Width.
Dell XPS 13 keyboard
Dell XPS 13 performance
The notebook also held up against our synthetic tests, scoring 5,365 on the Geekbench 5 overall performance test, which was enough to top the 4,104 premium laptop average and the Spectre (5,004, Core i7-1165G7 CPU). However, the Yoga 9i (5,440, Core i7-1185G7 CPU), MacBook Pro (5,880, Apple M1 SoC) and Flow X13 (7,925, AMD Ryzen 9 5980HS CPU) all outpaced the XPS 13.
There was a slip up on the Handbrake test; the XPS 13 took 18 minutes and 33 seconds to transcode a 4K video to 1080p. It’s slower than the 16:54 category average. The Spectre was somewhat faster with a time of 18:05 while the Yoga 9i and MacBook Pro (Rosetta) clocked in at 14:24 and 13:38, respectively. The Flow X13 had the fastest time at 8:43.
The XPS 13’s SSD duplicated 25GB of mixed media for a transfer rate of 814.4 megabytes per second, crushing the 604.5MBps average. The Flow 13’s 1TB M.2 2230 NVMe PCIe 3.0 SSD delivered a speed of 779.5MBps while the Spectre (1TB PCIe NVMe M.2 SSD) reached 764MBps and the Yoga 9i (512GB PCIe NVMe SSD) hit 692.3MBps.
Dell XPS 13 graphics
Armed with Intel’s Intel Iris Xe GPU, the Dell has a bit more graphical oomph. In fact, Intel is promising gamers can play more titles at 1080p thanks to the chip having double the performance of the previous generation chip.
The XPS 13 scored 15 frames per second on the Sid Meier’s Civilization VI: Gathering Storm benchmark. That’s below the 28-fps premium gaming average as well as the 29 fps from the MacBook Pro, the 25 fps the Yoga 9i scored, and the 21 fps from the Spectre.
Dell XPS 13 battery life
Dell XPS 13 heat
Dell XPS 13 webcam
Dell XPS 13 software and warranty
For your third-party apps, you have Killer Control Center, to set network bandwidth priority. The laptop also comes with a 20GB of free Dropbox storage for a year. There is, of course, some Windows 10 bloatware, such as Netflix, Hulu, Dolby Access, Hidden City: Hidden Object Adventure and Solitaire.
The Dell XPS 13 ships with a one-year hardware warranty with onsite and in-home service after remote diagnosis. See how Dell fared during our annual special reports: Tech Support Showdown and Best and Worst Brands.
Bottom line
A beautiful design, powerful performance, a gorgeous display –– there’s a reason the Dell XPS 13 remains a perennial favorite at Laptop Mag. The notebook gives consumers what they want in a system that performs as well as it looks. For $1,800, you get a lightweight beauty with a great super high-res display, comfortable keyboard and a pair of surprisingly loud speakers. Plus, you get the power of one of Intel’s powerful 11th Gen Core i7 processors and the company’s new Iris Xe Graphics GPU, which provides enough graphical oomph to play a solid array of games on lower settings at 1080p.
However, if you’re looking for even more power and longer battery life, you’ll want either the 13-inch MacBook Pro M1 ($1,899) or the Lenovo Yoga 9i ($1,379). The Asus ROG Flow X13 is also a good choice, but since it costs $2,999, it’s an expensive proposition. But if you’re looking for a premium workhorse that’s equal parts portable and powerful, you can’t go wrong with the Dell XPS 13.