Acer Swift 14 AI review
Long battery life, a matte display and great price point – what's not to like?
Is this the most sensible of the Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite AI laptops (even now that the X2 series has been announced)? It’s now cheaper than almost all its competition, just as powerful, and has a practical matte-finish screen that's refreshing to use. Sure, its design isn’t the most exciting, and the one 'out-there' part is a swing and a miss. But if you’re after a long-lasting workhorse, Acer's Swift 14 AI is a solid pick – and a savvily priced one now, too.
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Above average webcam
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Great CPU performance
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Using a matte screen is refreshing
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Long battery life (if not close to claims)
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Price has now fallen to a very agreeable asking point
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Loud touchpad clicker
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Less slick design than its direct rivals
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LCD screen can’t quite match OLED alternatives
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Some compatibility issues, as per first-gen Qualcomm chip
Why you can trust T3
The Acer Swift 14 AI is one of the first-generations of AI laptops that you've almost certainly heard about by now. They are a flashy bunch, but this Acer might be the most practical of the lot.
That's because it's not the most expensive and, given our lived-with and late arrival to this review, it's now far cheaper than its original list price – further adding to its appeal among the best laptops in 2026.
Aside from one silly addition – more on that in a minute – it's not too much of a show-off. And it's the only Snapdragon X Elite laptop we've reviewed thus far with a matte screen.
But is the Swift 14 AI the most desirable of the AI bunch? Well, no. But that amicable price point, plus the fact it's got travel-friendly battery life and reflection-muting screen, go together like cheese and biscuits.
Price & Availability
The Acer Swift 14 AI was already among the most affordable of the Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite first-generation laptops. It started life at £1199/$1199, but can (at the time of writing) be nabbed with more than 40% off that asking price at Currys in the UK, and almost the same discount at Best Buy in the USA.
It’s also worth noting that this nets you 1TB storage. To get that in, say, a Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 would cost you far, far more. And the Acer is cheaper than the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7X – which is a T3 favourite among these Snapdragon-powered AI laptops.
Design
The Acer Swift 14 AI is an odd design duck, though. In most senses this is a typical upper-tier Acer portability laptop. It's not quite as slick as a MacBook or Samsung Galaxy Book. But maybe that's okay.
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Acer has paired that sort of sensible styling with the most unnecessary addition though. See the unusual-looking pattern on the touchpad? There are LEDs that light up underneath it, and they illuminate one quadrant at a time, when you press the CoPilot button on the keyboard.
This is your physical shortcut to the Acer Swift 14 AI's CoPilot artificial intelligence (AI) features. On one hand, it looks pretty cool. On the other, it's also spectacularly pointless. And there's no way to re-programme it as, say, a touch volume or brightness indicator.
The rest of the Acer Swift 14 AI's design is tidy, if a little ordinary compared with its "made for AI" peers. The keyboard plate, lid and underside are all metal. It's clearly a higher-end design. The lid is plain, and the laptop is slim and light without aggressively gunning for either, which can backfire.
It doesn't immediately feel as dense or tough as a Samsung Galaxy Book Edge, because of one deliberate choice: the Acer Swift 14 AI has an “ergolift” style hinge. This is where the keyboard is raised slightly by the back of the hinge.
The idea is that the typing angle becomes a bit more comfortable. But it also makes a little bit of keyboard flex virtually unavoidable, as you're creating a void underneath the entire base. And that's why you miss out on the dense feel of an Apple MacBook or Samsung Galaxy Book, or at least the final 5% of it.
The Acer Swift 14 AI also has a raised plastic screen border, not the edge-to-edge glass that is the most desirable of designs. Do you have to care about this stuff? Absolutely not. Plenty of folks do, though.
Display
That raised plastic border is thanks to one of what I think is the top reason to consider a Acer Swift 14 AI over its rivals. This thing has a 14-inch (2560 x 1600 pixel) LCD screen. That's nothing special at this level, and many also have more contrasty OLED panels.
It is unusual, however, in that it has a matte finish. This is, in one sense, deeply uncool. Almost all style laptops have glossy screens – because they make colours pop.
Glossy screens also attract fingerprints and reflections, though, which can be a real nightmare when you want to work anywhere and everywhere. And portable style laptops are all about that for many people.
The screen surface here doesn't obliterate reflections quite as completely as the etched glass of the TCL 50 Pro phone I'm using right now. But it also smears light sources less, and means no more seeing your face reflected back at you. Ever. Matte screens scatter light, they don't somehow ingest it.
Like most matte laptops, the Acer Swift 14 AI has a plastic top surface and is a non-touch display. Typical of the latest screens, it's a 120Hz screen, and has decent colour.
As it’s an LCD, though, you’ll see blacks glow in a dark room, and peak brightness of 400 nits is just okay rather than great. It doesn’t support HDR (high dynamic range) either.
Keyboard and Touchpad
For at least the last year I've complained about one thing every time an Acer laptop has come up for review: the brand has stuck plastic touchpads in even its high-end PCs, calling them "ocean glass". That's recycled plastic.
Acer wins points for environmental cred, but loses them again for the slightly naff feel of a plastic pad, and for probably tricking a few people into thinking "ocean glass" is, y'know, glass.
The Acer Swift 14 AI swerves that issue by using real glass. Praise be.
It's a solid pad with a lovely smooth surface. And while it's inlaid with the unnecessary light-up CoPilot insignia, all that's going on under the surface. It's ultra-smooth from end to end on the surface.
Sure, there's a big old dead zone at the top (as it's a mechanical pad), the clicker is annoyingly loud, and the entire pad flexes a bit in the middle (thanks 'ergolift' hinge) – but it's the best Acer pad I've used in a while.
The Acer Swift 14 AI’s keyboard is closer to the Acer thin-and-light norm, and sits somewhere mid-table among Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite PCs, below the picks from Microsoft, Lenovo and Asus. But they all cost more.
This is a keyboard with fairly slimline keys. They feel fast, and have a nice spring to them. And unlike the touchpad, they are fairly quiet – the spacebar aside.
Some will like the raised typing angle. Others may not like how this raised style gives typing a slightly less solid feel, due to the way the keyboard is less rooted to the surface under the laptop.
I'm also not a big fan of how the LEDs of the two-level white backlight are quite so nakedly visible under the gap of each key cap. It’s all consistent with the continual observation that the Acer Swift 14 AI is a fairly nice laptop, not an immaculate and pristine one. Again, though, current price totally reflects this.
Performance
Now then, let's have a brief history of Qualcomm's presence in the PC space. This Acer was among the first wave of Qualcomm's AI laptops. The chip-maker had previously had a crack at breaking into mainstream Windows PCs, but those older chip types (8cx and suchlike) kinda sucked – but this new Snapdragon X effort really does not.
For starters, the CPU performance you get with the Acer Swift 14 AI is excellent. It easily beats the slightly newer 2nd Gen Intel Ultra PCs, by up to an eye-opening 30% – and that's according to some of the tests we’ve done. Note, however, that second-gen Qualcomm (X2) and upgraded Intel are incoming this year, in the first quarter/half of 2026.
Anyway, that battery performance is pretty wild when we’re talking about running test software that wasn’t originally designed to run on this kind of hardware. The Acer Swift 14 AI has a totally different architecture from the average Windows PC, meaning it has to run most software through a translation layer.
In older Qualcomm iterations that caused problems with compatibility. But in the newer kit in the Acer Swift 14 AI? It's light-years better. Most apps and games run no problems, with no obvious sign you’re not using a totally ordinary Windows laptop with an AMD or Intel CPU.
There are a couple of issues that should turn at least a few of you off these laptops as a whole, though. Some apps, and some peripherals, don’t get on with Qualcomm Snapdragon X like the Acer Swift 14 AI. Those apps will just refuse to run – which is where the newer-gen X2 is going to be improved (but pricier).
The Acer Swift 14 AI’s gaming and graphics aren’t as good as the pure CPU side either. This laptop gets creamed by the Asus ZenBook S14 OLED, the first second-gen Intel Ultra-equipped laptop we reviewed, on frame rates in games.
With one of those you can even play Cyberpunk 2077, fairly comfortably, and have it look good. With a Acer Swift 14 AI it’s a real struggle to get those more demanding games running at anything approaching a bearable pace.
I have been fairly impressed by the noise the laptop makes under continual pressure, though. It has a fan, but it’s very quiet when you’re stressing the CPU and GPU. The only time I’ve found it a little distracting was when the Acer Swift 14 AI was downloading an epic boatload of system updates.
Battery
Long battery life is the best reason to buy one of these Qualcomm Snapdragon laptops. Yep, more than the AI stuff. The Acer Swift 14 AI has among the biggest batteries in its generation too, maxing-out on that appeal.
Acer says the Swift 14 AI can last up to 26 hours. As usual for a Windows PC battery claim, this is a bit ambitious. In my tests, the laptop lasted for 15 hours of video streamed from YouTube. You can expect similar stamina for light work – writing up documents and a little web browsing.
This drops down to around 3 hours when the Acer Swift 14 AI is used to play a demanding game. I tried The Witcher 3 for the job, whose top graphics mode can still melt GPUs thanks to the antics of those crazy kids over at CD Projekt Red.
That’s a great result, double or triple the stamina of an actual gaming laptop. I’d still pick a rival with an Intel Ultra chipset for gaming, mind.
The Acer Swift 14 AI also has an above-average webcam, one capable of 1440p video instead of the usual 1080p resolution. This can look great, as long as it has a decent amount of light with which to work.
In a dingy room, the noise reduction gets quite severe. So while it looks reasonably clean, aside from some fizziness around the contours of your face, you don’t get that sense of higher detail and sharpness without reasonable light. It’s a higher-res camera, not one with a massive sensor.
The Acer Swift 14 AI speakers are unremarkable, though. They have no real bass, maximum volume is pedestrian, and some content causes a bit of mid-range distortion when maxed out. These aren’t poor-sounding speakers, but some rivals go next-level on sound quality.
Connections are ordinary, too. There are 2x USB-Cs, 2x USB-As, and a headphone/mic socket. There’s no HDMI or a memory card slot.
Verdict
The Acer Swift 14 AI may not be the glossiest of Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite laptops, but it might just be the most practical. Indeed, its matte-finished screen and high-capacity battery are big boons for the sort of general productivity work these laptops are great at.
You may come to the Acer Swift 14 AI expecting some life-changing artificial intelligence gubbins, but this is really just a great travel laptop for work. And there’s nothing wrong with that.
A few parts could be sharpened up, though. The touchpad is a bit loud, the style isn’t quite on the level of the slickest in this class, and I'm no fan of those touchpad LEDs. But, given the significant price drop of this laptop, those are in no way deal-breakers to what's a long-lasting, solid workhorse.
Also consider
Where to start? In the past we’ve said the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7X is our pick of the first-wave “made for AI” laptops. It has a more substantive keyboard, an even sharper (and glossier) screen, and a slightly more slick design. You will usually pay slightly more for it online, though.
The Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 feels like a more cohesive design too, but to spec it up to the Swift 14 AI’s level you’ll have to pay a fortune. If you can get by with much less storage and a bit less power, the base model is lovely to use in general, its touchpad and keyboard are a cut above Acer’s.
Don’t rule out the newer 2nd-generation Intel Ultra PCs too (before the even newer gen arrive first quarter of 2026). The Asus Zenbook S14 OLED is one example: it has less CPU power, but none of the compatibility issues, and far better gaming/graphics power.

Mike is T3's Tech Editor. He's been writing about consumer technology for 15 years and his beat covers phones – of which he's seen hundreds of handsets over the years – laptops, gaming, TV & audio, and more. There's little consumer tech he's not had a hand at trying, and with extensive commissioning and editing experience, he knows the industry inside out. As the former Reviews Editor at Pocket-lint for 10 years where he furthered his knowledge and expertise, whilst writing about literally thousands of products, he's also provided work for publications such as Wired, The Guardian, Metro, and more.
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