The best Cyber Monday laptop deals of 2025: Top offers on PCs from Amazon, Microsoft, Asus, Dell and more

Black Friday is gone, but Cyber Monday is here and there are still loads of laptops on sale - we've picked out some of the best below
Written By
Updated on 1 December 2025

As sure as night follows day, Cyber Monday comes after Black Friday but despite the change in name, there are still plenty of laptop deals to get stuck into.

Before you splash all that money you’ve been saving on the first tempting deal you see, however, have a peruse of our deals list first, because retailers don’t always make it easy to tell a deal is really a good one or not and it’s very easy to be taken in.

However, we spend the time to check every deal we write about to ensure they represent a proper discount. And we check prices against the historical averages, not just the RRP, which tends to be a lot higher.

Don’t worry if you don’t find what you’re looking for right away, though, because Amazon, Currys, AO and the like will be constantly dropping new deals throughout the week. So, keep popping back because there’s going to be loads more where these deals came from.

You may also want to check out the best deals across other types of products this Black Friday. You can keep on top of bargains on everything from air fryers to vacuum cleaners and TVs right here, on our Best Cyber Monday 2025 deals page.

But what do you do if a deal you see isn’t on this page? How do you tell if a laptop is any good or if the deal is genuine? These are things you can do for yourself, if you follow a few general rules of thumb and if you have a few minutes spare to research the price history:

Key specifications

These are the three critical specifications you need to worry about:

  1. The CPU is the most important specification, both for performance and efficiency. If you go for a laptop with an Intel CPU that’s two or more years old, you can expect mediocre battery life. A 2024 or 2025 Intel laptop will be generally much better, while laptops with Snapdragon and Apple chips. And be aware that really cheap laptops often have under-powered, very old Intel chips inside. In general, our advice is to choose a Core i- or a Core Ultra-powered machine and avoid Celeron or N100 laptops
  2. RAM is just as important for performance as the CPU and, in general, we’d advise opting for the most you can afford here. 16GB is the sweet spot, 32GB is better; we’d recommend avoiding 8GB or 4GB machines, though
  3. Storage is another critical consideration. Although much of what we do these days is in the cloud, you’ll be surprised at how quickly a 256GB SSD fills up and it’s annoying having to fiddle around making decisions about which files and applications to keep and which to dump. That’s why we prefer laptops with a 512GB SSD as the bare minimum these days. If your budget is tight, however, sometimes you’ll be able to upgrade the storage for not much cash – many cheaper gaming laptops will allow you access to the internals and some have spare slots. This is worth checking before you buy

Is it really a deal?

This applies to all Black Friday deals, not just laptops, but not all deals are what they seem. Retailers will always show the maximum possible discount, usually on the RRP, and often the price won’t represent much of a discount at all on recent prices. It might even be more expensive than it has been before.

This is, most of the time, pretty easy to check. You can check historic Amazon prices using tools like CamelCamelCamel and Keepa to look at prices over time and see for yourself how good or bad a deal really is.

M2 MacBook Aier on a garden table

We rarely see huge discounts on Apple’s MacBook laptops but this deal on the 2022 M2 model is a stunner. And don’t be put off by the fact that this is a three-year-old machine – the Apple M2 chip has more than enough performance to deliver a snappy, responsive performance for most people and tasks.

Take our advice: ignore the £899 M4 MacBook Air and choose this M2 model instead. It’s a stunner of a deal and we don’t think you’ll see a better offer all Black Friday.

The Lenovo IdeaPad 3x 2025 pictured on a coffee table from the front right

If you’re after a new laptop but don’t want to spend more than £500, the Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 3x is a great place to start. It’s powered by a Snapdragon X processor, ensuring snappy responsiveness and long battery life (it lasted over 15 hours in our tests), plus it comes with 16GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD. It’s a shame that this deal isn’t on the OLED model – the 15in IPS screen in use here is a little drab – but it is large, sharp and bright enough for most uses and at this price, who’s complaining?

  • Black Friday/Cyber Monday 2025 price: £649 | View deal at Amazon
  • Average price over the past 180 days: £930
The Microsoft Surface Laptop 13in, pictured on a table next to a house plant in a red pot

It’s confusing, we know, but the 13in Microsoft Surface Laptop is actually a cheaper, more recent version of the Laptop 7 detailed below. As well as a smaller display, it has a slighty less powerful processor, but otherwise it’s just as good, and battery life is even better. In our tests, this compact machine lasted nearly 24 hours playing video continuously.

Our chief criticism of it when we first reviewed it in June 2025 was that the price was high compared with its rivals and considering the specification. Well, it’s now £649 in the Black Friday sales, and for the model with twice the storage (512GB) of the one we tested originally.

Be careful when buying, though. This sits on the same page as the 13.8in Surface Laptop 7 – an older, more expensive machine with a larger display. If you start fiddling with options, you might end up buying the wrong laptop without realising.

  • Black Friday/Cyber Monday 2025 price: £1,540 | View deal at Amazon
  • Average price over the past 180 days: £1,956
An image of the Asus Zenbook Duo 2025, from the front, in dual screen mode

The Asus Zenbook Duo 14 OLED is a laptop with a difference. Instead of one 14in 120Hz 3K OLED touchscreen, it has two, while a kickstand underneath and a detachable keyboard turns it into a twin-screen powerhouse when you have the chance to set up at a desk. And while some might worry that it’s too chunky or heavy, you’ll probably also be surprised to discover that it’s only 1.65kg.

It’s among our favourite laptops released in the past two years – it’s certainly the most flexible – and this is the most recent model. It comes equipped with an Intel Core Ultra 9 285H CPU, 32GB of RAM and a huge 2TB SSD. At the Cyber Monday price of £1,540 it’s a hell of a lot of laptop for the money.

ASUS Zenbook Duo 14 OLED UX8406CA Laptop | 14.0" 120Hz 3K Dual-OLED Touchscreen | Intel Core Ultra 9-285H | 32GB RAM | 2TB SSD | Detachable Keyboard | Windows 11

ASUS Zenbook Duo 14 OLED UX8406CA Laptop | 14.0" 120Hz 3K Dual-OLED Touchscreen | Intel Core Ultra 9-285H | 32GB RAM | 2TB SSD | Detachable Keyboard | Windows 11

£1,659.99

Check Price
  • Black Friday/Cyber Monday 2025 price: £800 | View deal at Amazon
  • Average price over the past 180 days: £1,016

Considering how expensive desktop GPUs are right now, being able to buy a RTX 5060-powered laptop for less than £1,000 sounds like a bargain to us. This Acer laptop pairs one of these with an Intel Core i7-13620H CPU and costs a mere £800 – a £200 saving on the average recent price.

It also comes with 16GB of RAM, has a 1TB SSD, plus the display refreshes at 165Hz and has a resolution of 1,920 x 1,080. At that resolution, no game should pose any kind of problem for this machine.

acer Nitro V15 ANV15-51 Gaming Laptop - Intel Core i7-13620H, 16GB, 1TB SSD, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060, 15.6" Full HD 165Hz, Windows 11, Black

acer Nitro V15 ANV15-51 Gaming Laptop – Intel Core i7-13620H, 16GB, 1TB SSD, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060, 15.6" Full HD 165Hz, Windows 11, Black

£949.99

Check Price
  • Black Friday/Cyber Monday 2025 price: £599 | View deal at John Lewis
  • Average price over the past 180 days at Amazon: £835 (32GB version)
The Asus Zenbook A14 pictured from the front on a wood workbench

The Asus Zenbook A14 released early in 2025 is one of the lightest, longest-lasting, loveliest laptop we’ve reviewed this year and it’s currently the subject of one of the best deals we’ve seen this Black Friday so far. John Lewis has the model we reviewed on at £599, which is a whopping £500 off the original price.

To be fair that price was always a little over ambitious for this machine, and it has since dropped to around £800 for the upgraded 32GB model, but £599 is a bargain for a laptop this well made.

  • Black Friday/Cyber Monday 2025 price: £899 | View deal at Amazon
  • Average price over the past 180 days: £1,275
microsoft surface laptop 7 review laptop open on home screen positioned to the right

The Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13.8in is one of our all-time favourite laptops. It’s well made, slim and light, has great battery life, comes with a touchscreen – and it’s as attractive, if not more so, than a MacBook Air.

This Cyber Monday deal sees the price cut to an even lower price than on Black Friday, from £949 to £899 – from an average price of £1,275. For that, you get a 12-core Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite CPU with 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD. And take note: although the base M4 MacBook Air is cheaper than this, it comes with half the storage.

  • Black Friday/Cyber Monday 2025 price: £949 | View deal at Amazon
  • Average price over the past 180 days: £1,389
Product image of the Samsung Galaxy Book4 from a right side on perspective

This laptop is a real Rolls Royce of a machine. It comes with a gorgeous 16in 3K AMOLED touchscreen that refreshes at up to 120Hz. It’s quick and responsive thanks to its Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite processor, packs in 16GB of RAM and 1TB of fast SSD storage, and battery life is pretty good, too. It lasted 13hrs 26mins in our video rundown test, which is impressive for such a big, beefy laptop.

Better yet, it’s currently reduced to an eminently reasonable £999 from the average 180-day price of £1,389, which is a pretty tasty discount. It is, however, worth noting that it has been this price before (between the 19th and 27th September 2025) – so don’t panic if you can’t afford it right now.

  • Black Friday/Cyber Monday 2025 price: £649 | View deal at Argos
  • Average price over the past 180 days: £734
A render of the Asus TUF A15 FA506NCFR gaming laptop on a white background

We’ve reviewed a few of ASUS’ budget TUF gaming laptops over the years and we’ve always come away impressed. We haven’t tested this one in particular, but the specification looks on point and the price is very tempting, even though the lowest price at Amazon has gone.

You can still get hold of it for £649 – and that’s a great price for a laptop that should be capable of playing most games, albeit at reduced resolution and quality levels. It comes with an AMD Ryzen 7-7435HS CPU, an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3050 GPU , 16GB of RAM and a sizeable 1TB SSD and the screen is a decent 144Hz effort. You won’t see amazing battery life but this laptop packs a real punch for not much money – a great choice for anyone requiring power on a tight budget.

  • Black Friday/Cyber Monday 2025 price: £949 | Dell
  • Average price over the past 180 days: £1,169
Alienware 16X Aurora - open on a pale wood desk

If you’re a keen PC gamer and you can’t face being without the latest Nvidia GPU, you might want to take a look at this Black Friday deal on the Alienware 16 Aurora. It’s this year’s model, comes with an RTX 5060 graphics chip with 8GB of VRAM, an Intel Core 7 240H CPU, 16GB of system RAM and a 16in 2.5K 120Hz display.

For £949, that’s a pretty serious level of specification and it should enable you to play games at high frame rates at native resolution. This Black Friday deal isn’t a massive discount on the usual price but we don’t think you’ll get a more powerful gaming laptop for under a grand anywhere else.

Written By

Head of reviews at Expert Reviews, Jon has been testing and writing about products since before most of you were born (well, only if you were born after 1996). In that time he’s tested and reviewed hundreds of laptops, PCs, smartphones, vacuum cleaners, coffee machines, doorbells, cameras and more. He’s worked on websites since the early days of tech, writing game reviews for AOL and hardware reviews for PC Pro, Computer Buyer and other print publications. He’s also had work published in Trusted Reviews, Computing Which? and The Observer. And yet, even after so many years in the industry, there’s still nothing more he loves than getting to grips with a new product and putting it through its paces.

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