TechRadar Verdict
The Samsung Galaxy Book6 Enterprise Edition is a solid all-rounder for everyday use. Intel's Panther Lake platform delivers a genuine step forward in efficiency, and the battery life is genuinely impressive for a 16-inch machine. But it doesn’t have USB4 or TB4, even at this high price.
Pros
- +
Latest Intel Series 300 silicon
- +
Beautifully engineered
- +
LAN port onboard
- +
Strong Panther Lake NPU performance
- +
Built for Enterprise deployment
Cons
- -
Expensive for the spec
- -
Zero easy upgrades
- -
USB 3.2 Gen 2 ports
- -
Heavy to carry at 1.74 kg
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Samsung Galaxy Book6 EE: 30-second review
Samsung's Galaxy Book series has always aimed at the sensible middle of the market. Not the cheapest, not the most powerful, but reliably built and tightly integrated with the rest of the Galaxy ecosystem. The Book6 Enterprise Edition continues that tradition, but with a genuinely interesting processor under the hood and an Enterprise deployment capability.
Intel's Core Ultra Series 3, codename Panther Lake, marks the company's first laptop silicon on the 18A process node. In the Pro and Ultra models debuting this cycle, the architecture shows its teeth. The standard Book6 EE is more restrained, using the Core Ultra 5 325 or Ultra 7 355 variants with Intel's integrated Xe3 graphics rather than the Arc B390 iGPU found in the Pro. That distinction matters, and we will come back to it.
What the standard Book6 EE does well is the things most buyers actually need. The battery life is genuinely long, the build quality feels solid for the price, and the symmetrical redesign is a clear improvement over earlier generations. The new 16:10 IPS WUXGA display gives more vertical real estate than before, even if it cannot match the OLED richness of the Pro tier.
The elephant in this room is the Pro model. At launch, the Galaxy Book6 Pro 16-inch is not dramatically more than the top Book6 EE configuration, and it brings a 3K AMOLED display, stronger integrated graphics and better thermal headroom. For buyers who plan to push the machine hard, that price gap becomes hard to ignore.
But the standard Book6 EE is not trying to be the Pro. It is aimed at everyday professionals and Galaxy ecosystem users who want a well-rounded machine at a sensible entry price. On those terms, it largely succeeds.
However, some of the Samsung-imposed limitations, like the USB ports, stop this from entering our hallowed best business laptops hall of fame.
Samsung Galaxy Book6 EE: Price and availability
- How much does it cost? From £1405
- When is it out? Available now in UK
- Where can you get it? Direct from Samsung B2B
The Galaxy Book6 was announced at CES in January 2026 and went on sale in the UK from 11 March 2026. European pre-orders opened from 25 February.
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It's available in US via Samsung, but also on Amazon, where prices start from $1280.
UK pricing starts at £1405 for the 14-inch model with a Core Ultra 5 processor, 16GB RAM and 512GB of storage. A 16-inch Core Ultra 7 model with 32GB and 512GB of storage sits at the top of the standard Book6 range at £1,809.
One with the specifications of the review hardware that includes the Core 7 Ultra 355 CPU, 32GB of RAM and 1TB of storage isn’t yet listed, but it’s likely to be north of £2000 based on these choices.
What also makes buying one directly from Samsung or one of its partner retailers so confusing is that it's still selling the Book5 and Book4 models, and some of these seem to be much better value for money, especially at the higher end.
As there are so many SKUs, here is a grid of what is available purely on the Book6 EE products in the UK.
Project | SKU Code | CPU Class | Memory/SSD | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
GB6 14 vPro | NP742BJG-KA2UK | U5v | 16G/512G | £ 1,449 |
GB6 14 vPro | NP742BJG-KG3UK | U7v | 32G/512G | £ 1,809 |
GB6 EE 14 | NP744BJG-KA2UK | U5 | 16G/512G | £ 1,409 |
GB6 EE 14 | NP744BJG-KG1UK | U7 | 16G/512G | £ 1,509 |
GB6 EE 14 | NP744BJG-KG3UK | U7 | 32G/512G | £ 1,769 |
GB6 EE 16 | NP764BJG-KA2UK | U5 | 16G/512G | £ 1,509 |
GB6 EE 16 | NP764BJG-KG1UK | U7 | 16G/512G | £ 1,609 |
GB6 EE 16 | NP764BJG-KG3UK | U7 | 32G/512G | £ 1,869 |
For those wondering, these machines are roughly about £150 more than the equivalent retail models, though they do come with some differences that I’ll mention later.
The immediate competition in the UK includes the Acer Swift 16 AI, the Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 5, and the ASUS Vivobook S 16. None of those offers the same Galaxy AI integration, though most come with an OLED option at comparable prices. The standard Book6 does not offer this screen technology, and the Enterprise Edition does not either unless you have a Pro model.
In terms of price, the extra cost over the retail Book6 seems plausible given what these machines might save a company in admin, but the baseline Book6 on which they’ve been built is expensive compared with the Book5 that came before it.
For those with money to burn, the Book6 Ultra Enterprise Edition 16-inch comes with a Core Ultra 7 processor, 32GB of RAM, 1TB of storage, and an Nvidia 5060 mobile GPU for an astonishing £3,619.
- Value: 3 / 5
Samsung Galaxy Book6 EE: Specs
Item | Spec |
Hardware: | Samsung Galaxy Book6 NP760VJG-KG5UK (16 inch, as reviewed) |
CPU: | Intel Core Ultra 7 355 (Series 3, Panther Lake) |
GPU: | Intel Graphics 4 Xe3 |
NPU: | Intel NPU, 49 TOPS |
RAM: | 32GB LPDDR5X (soldered) |
Storage: | 1TB M.2 PCIe 4.0 SSD |
Screen: | 16-inch IPS WUXGA, 1920 x 1200, 120Hz, 16:10 |
Ports: | 2x USB-C (one for charging), 2x USB-A 3.2, 1x HDMI, 1x RJ-45 LAN, 3.5mm audio |
Camera: | FHD 2MP webcam |
Networking: | Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 |
Dimensions: | 357.7 x 249.9 x 14.9 mm |
Weight: | 1.74 kg (16-inch) |
OS: | Windows 11 Pro (pre-installed) |
Battery: | 68Wh Super Fast Charging 2.0 |
PSU: | 45W (20V 2.25A) USB-C |
Samsung Galaxy Book6 EE: Design
- Symmetrical layout
- Aluminium chassis in dark grey
- Lots of ports
- 1.8 kg, heavier than the Pro at 1.56 kg
Samsung gave the entire Book6 range a visible redesign. The most immediately striking change is the symmetrical layout. The keyboard and trackpad are centred in the chassis, and the Samsung logo sits dead centre on the lid. It sounds like a minor adjustment, but in practice, it gives the whole machine a tidier, more composed appearance than its predecessors.
The chassis is aluminium throughout. Samsung's finish is understated, a satin dark grey that resists fingerprints reasonably well and gives nothing away about the modest price. The build feels solid, if anything its overly well-constructed. There is a little flex in the keyboard deck under pressure, but the lid is firm, and the hinge is nicely weighted.
At 1.8 kg, the 16-inch Book6 EE is not a machine you forget is in your bag. The Pro model, by comparison, weighs just 1.56 kg. For a single day of commuting, the difference is not dramatic. Over a week of travel, it becomes relevant. If portability is the primary concern, the Pro or something under 1.4 kg would serve better.
The keyboard has been redesigned with a symmetrical key layout and slightly larger keycaps. The backlight is present across all models, and, as a special feature of the EE design, there is a numeric keypad. The trackpad is generously sized for a Windows machine, though it is a standard mechanical unit. The haptic trackpad is reserved for the Ultra.
Port selection on the 16-inch model covers the basics: two USB-C ports (one supports USB PD charging), a USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 port, a full-size HDMI output, a 3.5mm headphone jack, and a physical RJ-45 LAN port. That last port is a welcome inclusion. Most thin laptops omit it entirely. The 14-inch model loses the LAN port, I believe.
The biggest issues here are the weight, which is over 300g heavier than the equivalent Acer Swift 16 AI, and some of the port choices.
If you are encouraging upper-body development among your staff and discouraging them from plugging anything in, this might be a good fit for your business.
I should also mention that there are no visible screws on this machine, so getting inside is problematic if you were thinking about upgrading the internal storage. As the memory is soldered, that’s a non-starter for adding more, even if you can get the case apart.
If you do pull the feet off and find the hidden screws, then you can get inside and discover an unused M.2 2280 slot ready to populate. Normally, this would be a reason for some celebration, but being realistic, the hidden screws would put off most owners before they discovered the upgrade path.
The move from 16:9 to 16:10 in the Book6 display is a welcome one. The extra vertical space makes a practical difference when writing documents or scrolling through code, and it brings the machine in line with competitors that adopted the format a year or two earlier.
The resolution is WUXGA, 1920 x 1200 on the 16-inch panel. That is not a headline number in a market where the Pro ships with a 3K AMOLED screen, but at 16 inches, it is a perfectly acceptable pixel density for everyday use.
IPS has well-known characteristics. Colour accuracy and brightness are adequate for productivity work. Contrast is reasonable, but you will not see the deep blacks or vivid saturation of an OLED. Glossy coating is available on the touchscreen models; the standard display is matte, which suits office use.
- Design: 4 / 5
Samsung Galaxy Book6 EE: Hardware
- Intel Core Ultra 7 355 (Panther Lake, Intel 18A)
- Intel integrated Xe3 graphics (4 Xe cores)
- 49 TOPS NPU for local AI tasks
- USB 3.2 Gen 2 ports
Before I talk about the platform, I’d like to cover how the Enterprise Edition is different to the retail Book6.
For starters, the retail models don’t offer vPro specification processors, although equally, it is only an option on the 14-inch Enterprise Edition machines.
The Enterprise Edition was built for enterprise deployment with customised OS imaging, BIOS configuration and asset tagging capabilities. It also supports Windows Autopilot and BIOS-level logo customisation, allowing organisations to deploy standardised systems at scale. These are nice-to-haves but hardly critical Enterprise features.
What is more important is that this build adds a discrete Trusted Platform Module for enhanced encryption and credential protection, IR facial recognition alongside the fingerprint reader, and aligns with NIST platform security requirements while integrating Samsung Knox protections. Therefore, if you wish to manage a fleet of company laptops from invasive threats, then the Enterprise Editions are better suited.
These things might not be relevant to smaller enterprises, but to Enterprise customers who are aiming to manage large computer inventories with modest IT resources, they could be critical. Anyway, let’s cover what is under the hood.
Intel's Core Ultra Series 3 represents a meaningful change in the processor landscape. Built on the new 18A process node, Panther Lake is Intel's return to fab leadership after several years on TSMC. The architecture separates high-performance P-cores from efficiency E-cores more distinctly than before, and the NPU has grown substantially. The 49 TOPS figure here qualifies the Book6 as a Copilot+ PC, but that’s not the whole story.
The Core Ultra 7 355 in the top 16-inch Book6 configuration is a U-series part, designed for efficiency rather than all-out performance. It handles web browsing, document editing, light photo work and video calls without any meaningful strain. The integrated Xe3 graphics are improved over the previous generation. Samsung quotes 41% better graphical performance than the Book5, but it is still a step below the Arc B390 iGPU in the Pro, which brings 12 Xe3 cores and a larger shader array.
As a reviewer, I find Intel's return to the ‘Intel Graphics’ naming convention patently idiotic and designed to intentionally confuse the customer. The silicon here is based on the Battlemage work Intel did for its discrete video card range, the one it seems so intent on killing.
The review unit arrives with 32GB of LPDDR5X, which is the right amount for a machine positioned to handle AI workloads alongside a regular productivity stack. The base SKUs start at 16GB, which is workable but leaves less headroom as Galaxy AI features grow more demanding. Either way, the RAM is soldered throughout the range. The configuration you order is the one you keep.
The problem with not having more than 32GB of RAM is that it effectively caps how many local LLMs you can realistically run, even if the combined TOPS of the CPU, GPU, and NPU is decent.
This is where the platform truly shines for day-to-day local assistant use, running models like Llama 3.1 (8B) or Gemma 2 (9B) using standard 4-bit or 5-bit quantisation (e.g., Q4_K_M or Q5_K_M). Smaller models like Llama 3.2 (1B/3B), Microsoft Phi 3.5, or Qwen 2.5 (3B) run exceptionally well, and it is possible to load and run slightly heavier models such as Mistral Nemo (12B) or Qwen 2.5 (14B).
The sweet spot for AI is undoubtedly the 7B to 9B parameter models, where this hardware can easily generate 12 to 20 tokens per second. Modes at Q4 quantisation in this range typically require around 5 GB to 6 GB of memory. This leaves plenty of extra memory within your 32 GB pool to significantly increase the context window, maybe up to 32K, without risking out-of-memory crashes.
However, the hardware on this machine isn’t all good news.
For an inexplicable reason, Samsung decided that customers who may have spent between £1500 and £2000 on a laptop didn’t deserve USB4 or Thunderbolt 4. To put that in perspective, a mini PC, like the GMKtec NucBox M6 Ultra, comes with USB4 for £239.99.
What’s super annoying about this omission is that the Intel processors in this platform all come with USB4 inherently; Samsung just couldn’t be bothered to wire it up.
Some IT person reading this is probably thinking, “That’s no big deal, we disabled all the USBs anyway”. Well, on the basis that you need those ports to recharge, good luck with that plan.
In all honesty, I couldn’t recommend a machine costing this much that didn’t come with a USB-C type port that was only USB 3.2 Gen 2.
- Hardware: 3.5 / 5
Samsung Galaxy Book6 EE: Performance
Laptops | Row 0 - Cell 1 | Samsung Galaxy Book6 EE | Acer Swift Edge 14 AI |
CPU | Intel Core Ultra 7 355 | Intel Core Ultra 7 258V | |
Cores/Threads |
| 8C 8T | 8C 8T |
TPD | Row 3 - Cell 1 | 8W-25W | 17W-37W |
RAM | Row 4 - Cell 1 | 32GB LPDDR5 7467MT/s | 32GB LPDDR5X
|
SSD | Row 5 - Cell 1 | Samsung PM9C1 1TB | 1TB Kingston OM8PGP4102Q |
Graphics | Row 6 - Cell 1 | Intel Graphics 4 (40 TOPS) | Intel Arc 140V |
NPU | Row 7 - Cell 1 | Intel NPU (49 TOPS) | Intel NPU (47 TOPS) |
3DMark | WildLife | 21,590 | 20,983 |
| Row 9 - Cell 0 | FireStrike | 6065 | 8003 |
| Row 10 - Cell 0 | TimeSpy | 3365 | 4065 |
| Row 11 - Cell 0 | Steel Nomad.L | 2529 | 2989 |
CineBench24 | Single | 109 | 120 |
| Row 13 - Cell 0 | Multi | 614 | 389 |
| Row 14 - Cell 0 | Ratio | 5.64 | 3.24 |
GeekBench 6 | Single | 2733 | 2757 |
| Row 16 - Cell 0 | Multi | 11466 | 11148 |
| Row 17 - Cell 0 | OpenCL | 24373 | 29692 |
| Row 18 - Cell 0 | Vulkan | 28359 | 33890 |
CrystalDIsk | Read MB/s | 7053 | 4805 |
| Row 20 - Cell 0 | Write MB/s | 5969 | 3905 |
PCMark 10 | Office | 7739 | 8206 |
| Row 22 - Cell 0 | Battery | 18h 04m | 18h 28m |
Battery | Whr | 61.2 | 65 |
| Row 24 - Cell 0 | PSU | 45W | 100W |
WEI | Score | 8.4 | 8.8 |
For my comparison, I've used the Acer TravelMate P6 14 AI, since it shows what's changed from the 200 series to the new 300 series platforms.
I know that the 300 series architecture is an improvement over the 200 series, so why do these numbers not show that is the first obvious question.
From a processing perspective, the Intel Core Ultra 7 355 doesn’t deliver the same punch as the Intel Core Ultra 7 258V on single-threaded tasks, but it is better on multi-threading in some tasks.
But where it falls down considerably is in graphics performance, as the Intel Graphics 4 platform can’t hold a candle to the Arc 140V GPU on previous-generation chips.
It’s worth saying that some of the 300 series have the Arc B390 iGPU, but not this one, sadly. The focus, as it has been since the 100 series, is all on efficiency, and the 300 is certainly power efficient.
The headline battery claim from Samsung is 24 hours of video playback on the 16-inch model. That is a marketing number tested under controlled conditions, and real-world use will land somewhere south of that.
In my tests, it ran the PCMark battery test for an impressive 18 hours and 4 minutes, which is slightly under what the Acer Swift Edge 14 AI managed, but with a smaller battery. That’s enough for the longest working day that most people will likely encounter, and some.
For those wanting to truly burn the midnight oil, the Pro model has either a 78.07 or 67.18 Wh battery, and the Ultra packs a huge 80.20 Wh of capacity.
What helps battery life is that the 120Hz panel drops to 30Hz adaptively when content is static, which Samsung says cuts display power consumption by around 15% on the 16-inch model. That is a meaningful contribution to overall battery life in day-to-day use.
Super Fast Charging 2.0 brings the battery from flat to 33% in 30 minutes. That is useful for a quick top-up between meetings. A full charge will take considerably longer, especially since this model only comes with a 45W PSU. The system is calibrated to that power supply, as using a 100W USB-C charger didn’t speed up the charging process for me.
Overall, while performance in some respects is strong, the way Intel added better multitasking while reducing GPU performance might be an issue for graphics users.
- Performance: 4 / 5
Samsung Galaxy Book6 EE: Final verdict
The Galaxy Book6 is a confident and well-executed entry into the Panther Lake era for Samsung's mainstream laptop line. The build quality is good, if heavy, and the battery endurance is among the strongest you will find at this size. And the Galaxy AI integration is more practical than most of the AI laptop marketing that has dominated the past two years.
However, there are some significant flaws in this concept that appear specifically designed to encourage up-selling to the Book6 Pro series. Chief amongst these is the omission of the OLED display from this tier, making the IPS display merely adequate rather than impressive. The soldered RAM demands careful configuration from the start, and a machine costing more than £2000 that offers only USB 3.2 Gen2 is laughable in this era.
What I've since been told by Samsung is that the vPro models have USB4, which seems an excessive price premium merely to get a feature that all processors on this platform inherently have.
When I first got this machine, I was impressed by how many ports it had, despite the trend toward minimalist layouts. Except it needs those ports, because adding a docking station to this hardware when you only have USB 3.2 Gen 2 to connect is a pointless exercise.
For anyone coming to the Galaxy Book range for the first time, or Windows users who want something reliable, well-built and future-ready at an accessible entry point, the Book6 EE makes a reasonable case. However, if you don’t use AI locally, the Book5 and Book4 models make an even better one from a value and feature perspective.
Those with more demanding needs, the jump to Pro is worth the premium, leaving the base Book6 EE somewhat adrift.
Should you buy a Samsung Galaxy Book6 EEI?
Value | Expensive for a machine without OLED or Thunderbolt | 3/5 |
Design | Spacious and elegant, but hard work on wrists | 4/5 |
Hardware | Intel Core Ultra 300 Series CPU, but no easy upgrades | 3.5/5 |
Performance | Efficient and useful for local AI | 4/5 |
Overall | For the money, most customers would expect more | 4/5 |
Buy it if...
You are in the Samsung ecosystem
You are in the Samsung ecosystem. The Galaxy AI features are noticeably better when paired with a Galaxy phone, and the cross-device features, shared clipboard, file handoff and continued calls, are genuinely useful if you are already carrying a Galaxy handset.
You need a physical LAN port
It sounds basic, but a built-in RJ-45 on a slim 16-inch laptop is rare. If your workplace or home office involves wired connections, this matters.
Don't buy it if...
You need the best display you can get
The WUXGA IPS panel does the job, but the Galaxy Book6 Pro's 3K AMOLED is in a different class and not dramatically more expensive. If the screen is where you spend most of your time, spend slightly more.
You carry your laptop everywhere, every day
At 1.74 kg, the 16-inch Book6 EE is not a massive burden, but it is not light either. The Pro at 1.56 kg makes a more comfortable daily companion for heavy travellers.
For more top-performers for professionals, we've tested the best business computers.
Mark is an expert on 3D printers, drones and phones. He also covers storage, including SSDs, NAS drives and portable hard drives. He started writing in 1986 and has contributed to MicroMart, PC Format, 3D World, among others.
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