
If you’ve ever burned through your phone’s data plan using it as a hotspot while on the road, the Lenovo ThinkPad T14s Gen 7 AMD was built with you in mind. It’s one of the few business ultraportables under three pounds that offers both built-in 5G and up to 64 GB of soldered RAM together, a combination that typically costs significantly more in something like the ThinkPad X1 Carbon and simply isn’t available at this price point elsewhere. The AMD version is available globally now, months after its March debut at MWC 2026 raised expectations. Here’s whether it’s actually worth the premium.
Price: From $2,559
Where to Buy: Lenovo
ThinkPad T14s Gen 7 AMD in its carbon fiber hybrid and magnesium chassis. The 14-inch business ultraportable ships with Ryzen AI 5 through AI 7 PRO processors and optional 5G.
What Changed From Gen 6
Lenovo first showed off the T14s Gen 7 back in March with a three-pronged processor strategy: AMD Gorgon Point, Intel Panther Lake, and Snapdragon X. The Intel version reached shelves first, and the AMD variant has now followed, already sparking debate.
Threads on r/thinkpad are asking whether this is a downgrade from the Gen 6, and the answer is nuanced. The AMD T14s Gen 7 trades some things (no SODIMM upgrade path, OLED still hard to order) for others that matter more on the road: cellular connectivity and faster memory in a lighter package.
T14s vs. T14: Which One Is This?
Quick note if you’re comparing models: the T14s is the slimmer, lighter sibling to the T14, trading the T14’s more modular build for a thinner chassis and a sub-2.5-pound starting weight. If portability and 5G are the priority, the T14s is the one to look at.
Processor Options

Four chips are on the table: the entry-level Ryzen AI 5 430, the mid-range Ryzen AI 5 PRO 440, the Ryzen AI 7 445, and the top-spec Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450. All four are built on AMD’s Gorgon Point architecture with integrated RDNA 3.5 graphics and a dedicated NPU rated at up to 50 TOPS for on-device AI workloads. That NPU rating means the T14s Gen 7 qualifies for Microsoft’s Copilot+ PC requirements out of the box.

Memory
Memory is soldered in three tiers: 16 GB, 32 GB, or 64 GB. Lenovo lists LPDDR5X-8533, though Lenovo’s own PSREF notes that base configurations run at LPDDR5X-8000 due to platform limitations. Either way, that’s a lot of RAM in a 14-inch chassis. The downside is there are no SODIMM slots, so choose your configuration carefully at order time.
Connectivity and 5G
Connectivity is where the T14s Gen 7 stands out in this weight class. Sub-6 GHz 5G and 4G LTE are both available as build-to-order modem options, a feature you’d typically have to pay significantly more to find in a sub-three-pound chassis. You also get two Thunderbolt 4 ports, one USB-C 5Gbps port, one USB-A 5Gbps port, HDMI 2.1, a headphone jack, and an optional nano-SIM slot on WWAN-configured models. Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4 are standard.

Display
The display is the one area to temper expectations. Lenovo’s own documentation shows a 2.8K (1800p) OLED with 120 Hz variable refresh as an option, but that panel isn’t actually selectable in the US store at launch. What you can order today is a 1920×1200 IPS at 60 Hz. It’s adequate for productivity work, but if the OLED is what’s drawing you to this machine, check the configurator before committing.
Pricing
Pricing is the other complication. US pricing opens at $2,559, and notably that base configuration already ships with 32 GB of RAM rather than the 16 GB you’d expect at this tier. Stepping up to 64 GB will push the number higher still. At that price point, you’re competing against the MacBook Pro 14 with the M4 Pro chip, which offers better single-core performance and longer battery life.
Is This Actually a Downgrade From Gen 6?
This is the question dominating ThinkPad forums right now: and it’s fair. The T14s Gen 7 AMD costs more than a Gen 6 AMD at launch, the OLED display is listed but not yet orderable, and the soldered RAM means no DIY upgrades down the line. If you already own a Gen 6 with 32 GB, there’s no compelling reason to rush.

But if you’re buying new and need 5G or want to max out at 64 GB, there’s almost nothing else at this weight doing both. That’s the real value case here.
Where It Falls Short
The soldered RAM means no future upgrades: choose your config carefully at checkout. The OLED display is listed on Lenovo’s PSREF but not yet configurable in the US store. And the $2,559 starting price puts it in direct competition with Apple’s M4 Pro MacBook Pro 14, which delivers better single-core performance, longer battery life, and a mini-LED display that competes with OLED in most real-world conditions.

Who This Is For
Mobile professionals who need 5G on the go, want AMD’s latest AI silicon, and prioritize portability over display quality. If you travel frequently and need cellular connectivity without tethering to a phone, the T14s Gen 7 AMD is one of the few ultraportables that still offers that option.
Who This Isn’t For
Anyone on a tight budget, anyone who wants an OLED screen, or anyone who prefers to upgrade their RAM down the line. The Intel version may be a better fit if you want a third Thunderbolt 4 port (it ships with three TB4 ports vs the AMD’s two), and the Snapdragon X variant could offer better battery life for light workloads.

Price: From $2,559
Where to Buy: Lenovo
The Bottom Line
The ThinkPad T14s Gen 7 AMD delivers the connectivity and performance that road warriors actually need. The 5G option, 64 GB RAM capacity, and AMD’s solid Gorgon Point architecture make it a strong choice for mobile professionals who value connectivity over screen quality. Just make sure to check Lenovo’s latest configurator for OLED availability before you order.



