Laptop computer

Laptop Upgrade Difficulty Ratings by Brand (2026)

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POST TITLE: Laptop Upgrade Difficulty Ratings by Brand (2026)
SLUG: laptop-upgrade-difficulty-ratings
CATEGORIES: [89, 127]
FOCUS KEYWORD: laptop upgrade difficulty by brand
META DESCRIPTION: Compare upgrade difficulty across laptop brands. Learn which brands are easiest to upgrade (RAM, SSD, screen) and which to avoid.
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Some laptops are designed for easy upgrades; others are nearly impossible to service. This guide rates laptop brands by upgrade difficulty across RAM, SSD, screen, and keyboard replacements.

Upgrade Difficulty Scoring

RatingMeaningDifficulty for DIY User
Easy (5/5)User-removable panels; no glue or complex disassembly30 minutes or less; low risk
Moderate (3/5)Removable parts but requires careful work1-2 hours; medium risk
Hard (2/5)Components are glued or require extensive disassembly2+ hours; high risk of damage
Not Upgradeable (0/5)Soldered components or sealed designProfessional service only

Brand Upgrade Difficulty Ratings (2026)

Framework Laptop — 5/5 (Easy, Designed for Upgrades)

ComponentDifficultyNotes
RAMEasy (5/5)User-replaceable; quick-release clips
SSDEasy (5/5)User-accessible M.2 slot; no glue
ScreenModerate (3/5)Replaceable but requires bezel removal
KeyboardEasy (5/5)Modular design; plug-and-play replacement

Overall Rating: 5/5 — Framework is THE upgrade-friendly laptop. Explicitly designed for user repairs.

Dell Latitude / ThinkPad Series — 4/5 (Very Upgradeable)

ComponentDifficultyNotes
RAMEasy (5/5)Quick-release clips; clearly marked
SSDEasy (5/5)M.2 slot accessible without major disassembly
ScreenHard (2/5)Glued bezel; requires careful prying
KeyboardModerate (3/5)Removable but small ribbon connector

Overall Rating: 4/5 — Business laptops designed with serviceability in mind. RAM/SSD are trivial; screen/keyboard require care.

HP EliteBook / ProBook — 3.5/5 (Moderate)

ComponentDifficultyNotes
RAMEasy (5/5)Clearly accessible; quick-release
SSDEasy (5/5)M.2 slot visible on bottom panel
ScreenHard (2/5)Glued bezel; proprietary hinges
KeyboardHard (2/5)Glued keyboard; risky removal

Overall Rating: 3.5/5 — Good for RAM/SSD; avoid screen/keyboard DIY.

Dell XPS Series — 3/5 (Moderate, Getting Worse)

ComponentDifficultyNotes
RAMHard (2/5)Soldered on newer models (XPS 13 Plus); limited on standard XPS
SSDModerate (3/5)Accessible but requires careful disassembly; newer = soldered
ScreenVery Hard (1/5)Glued; ultra-thin design makes removal risky
KeyboardVery Hard (1/5)Integrated; not separately replaceable

Overall Rating: 3/5 — XPS prioritizes thinness over repairability. Modern models (2023+) are increasingly soldered.

ASUS VivoBook — 2/5 (Poor, Sealed Design)

ComponentDifficultyNotes
RAMHard (2/5)Often soldered on budget models; some have slots
SSDModerate (3/5)Accessible on some models; soldered on others
ScreenVery Hard (1/5)Glued bezel; sealed design
KeyboardVery Hard (1/5)Glued; requires full disassembly

Overall Rating: 2/5 — VivoBook is budget-friendly but not DIY-friendly. Often sealed; avoid repairs.

Apple MacBook — 1/5 (Sealed, Professional Service Only)

ComponentDifficultyNotes
RAMNot Upgradeable (0/5)Soldered to motherboard on all modern MacBooks
SSDHard (2/5)Some older models (2015-2017) have removable SSDs; modern = soldered
ScreenVery Hard (1/5)Glued; proprietary connectors
KeyboardVery Hard (1/5)Integrated; unreplaceable on modern MacBooks

Overall Rating: 1/5 — MacBooks are sealed by design. Apple discourages DIY repair. Use professional service if needed.

Gaming Laptops (ASUS ROG, Razer, MSI) — 2/5 (Difficult)

ComponentDifficultyNotes
RAMModerate (3/5)Often accessible but requires removing fans/heatsink
SSDModerate (3/5)M.2 slots present but may require extensive disassembly
ScreenHard (2/5)Glued; high-refresh screens are expensive to replace
KeyboardHard (2/5)RGB keyboards are proprietary; removal is risky

Overall Rating: 2/5 — Gaming laptops prioritize performance over repairability. RAM/SSD possible but require significant disassembly.

Key Findings

Best for UpgradesFramework (5/5), Lenovo ThinkPad (4/5), Dell Latitude (4/5)
ModerateHP EliteBook (3.5/5), Dell XPS (3/5)
Avoid DIYApple MacBook (1/5), ASUS VivoBook (2/5), Gaming laptops (2/5)

Screen & Keyboard Are Always Hard

Across all brands, screen and keyboard replacement is difficult because:

  • Components are glued, not screwed
  • Bezels and keyboards are sealed
  • Ribbon cables are fragile
  • Professional tools (heat gun, pry tools) are needed
  • Risk of breaking display or cracking plastic is high

For screen/keyboard, professional service (£100-200) is often worth the cost.

Future Trends (2026+)

Right to repair laws are pushing manufacturers toward easier upgrades. By 2027-2028, expect:

  • More brands adopting modular designs (like Framework)
  • Easier keyboard/screen replacement
  • Less soldering of RAM/SSD
  • Manufacturer-provided repair guides and parts

Apple and gaming laptop brands will likely remain sealed, but business laptops should improve.

Related Guides

FAQ

Recommended Products

Looking for compatible upgrades? Here are our top picks available on Amazon UK:

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