Published News
ASUS ExpertBook P5 G1 Expands the 14-inch Business Tier With 16-inch Options
April 03, 2026
ASUS has launched the ExpertBook P5 G1 in 14-inch and 16-inch sizes with Intel Core Ultra 200H processors, up to 96 GB RAM, and up to 6 TB dual-SSD storage. The real story is not the AI label: it is that near-workstation memory and storage options are moving into a lighter business chassis, but final value depends on real street pricing.
What Changed
ASUS announced the ExpertBook P5 G1 this week as a new business-focused lineup with Intel Core Ultra 200H CPUs (up to Core Ultra 7 255H), enterprise management support, and optional high-capacity configurations.
On paper, the P5 G1 can be configured up to 96 GB DDR5 RAM and up to 6 TB PCIe 4.0 SSD storage across two drives. ASUS also lists PCIe 5.0 support for one slot in specific configurations.
The practical comparison is with ASUS’s ExpertBook B3 G1 update from a few days earlier: both lines can reach similar top memory and storage ceilings, but P5 G1 starts lighter (from about 1.29 kg) while B3 G1 starts heavier (from about 1.44 kg).
Why It Matters
This launch matters most to IT teams and business buyers who need long lifecycle, security features, and high multitasking headroom without moving to full mobile workstations.
The useful shift is tier positioning: specs that used to sit in heavier, pricier categories are now shown in a thinner mainstream business line.
The limit is simple: ASUS has not provided broad street pricing for all top-end P5 G1 configurations yet, and maximum RAM/SSD options are usually SKU-dependent and not always the version most companies actually buy.
Practical Takeaway
If you are replacing fleets of 13- or 14-inch office notebooks, shortlist the ExpertBook P5 G1 only after checking your region’s real SKU list and price deltas versus B3 G1 class machines. If the price gap stays moderate, P5 G1 offers better mobility at similar peak configuration headroom.
Editorial process: Prepared from official source materials and independent coverage, then edited under Notebook Center publishing standards.