Mon. Mar 30th, 2026

Best Mid-Range Tablet of 2026?

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It is genuinely hard to get excited about tablets these days. Usually, you’re either looking at a predictable iPad refresh or a Samsung slate that feels like it was designed in a boardroom to meet a specific price point. However, the Honor MagicPad 4 actually made me stop and pay attention, which is no small feat given how crowded the “premium-but-not-quite-pro” market has become. After spending a solid amount of time with this device as my primary driver, I’ve found that it isn’t just another Android tablet; it’s a remarkably thin piece of glass and metal that punches way above its weight class.
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Summary

  • Ultra-Thin Profile: At just 4.8mm, it’s one of the sleekest tablets on the market, period.
  • Stunning OLED Return: The 12.3-inch OLED panel with a 165Hz refresh rate is a massive upgrade over its predecessor.
  • Serious Horsepower: The Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 handles intensive multitasking and gaming without breaking a sweat.
  • Immersive Eight-Speaker Array: For a device this thin, the spatial audio is surprisingly wide and clear.
  • Fast 66W Charging: Even with a 10,100mAh battery, you can get a 50% charge in about half an hour.
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Design And Build Quality

The first thing you notice—and honestly, the thing everyone I showed it to noticed—is how absurdly thin this thing is. At 4.8mm, it makes my old laptop look like a heavy brick. It weighs about 450g, which sounds light on paper, but in the hand, it feels dense and premium. I’ve been carrying it around in a tote bag, and half the time I have to double-check that it’s actually in there. I think we’ve reached a point where making things thinner doesn’t actually add much utility, but I can’t deny that it feels expensive.

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Honor opted for a flat metal frame that feels sturdy, though I’ll be honest, the lack of an IP rating makes me a bit nervous. I’m not someone who reads in the tub, but I’d definitely think twice before leaving this on a messy kitchen counter near a spill. The camera module on the back has that rounded-square look we’ve seen before, which is fine, I guess. It doesn’t scream “innovation,” but it looks professional enough for a coffee shop or a high-stakes office meeting.
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One minor gripe I had was with the accessories. I used the Smart Keyboard case for a few days, and while the keys themselves have a decent click to them, the folding stand mechanism is… well, it’s fiddly. It uses this weird system where the back cover folds away, and I never quite felt like it was “locked” in place. If you’re typing on a flat desk, it’s fine. If you’re trying to balance it on your lap during a train ride, good luck. It might just be me, but I found myself constantly readjusting it.

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The Display That Steals The Show

If you’re buying this tablet, you’re buying it for the screen. Honor moved back to an OLED panel here, and thank goodness for that. The previous model’s move to LCD felt like a step backward, so this feels like a homecoming. It’s a 12.3-inch beauty with a 3:2 aspect ratio, which I personally prefer for reading and writing over the more narrow 16:10 screens you see on some competitors. The colors are vibrant without being neon-bright, and the 3000 x 1920 resolution means everything looks incredibly sharp.

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Then there is the 165Hz refresh rate. Now, do you need 165Hz on a tablet? Probably not. Most movies are 24fps and most apps cap out at 60 or 120. But man, when you’re scrolling through a long PDF or playing a high-frame-rate game like Destiny: Rising, it is buttery smooth. It’s one of those things you don’t think you need until you use it, and then going back to a 60Hz screen feels like looking at a slideshow. I did notice that the peak brightness hits 2400 nits in HDR, which is helpful if you’re trying to work near a window, though it still struggles a bit under direct, harsh afternoon sunlight.

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I should mention the eye-care features, too. Honor is obsessed with PWM dimming—5280Hz in this case. I’m not particularly sensitive to screen flicker, but I did notice that my eyes felt a bit less “strained” after a three-hour binge of The Fantastic Four on Disney+. Whether that’s the technology or just a placebo, I’ll take it.

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Performance And Real-World Use

Under the hood, we’ve got the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5. It isn’t the “Elite” version, but in my day-to-day use, I couldn’t tell the difference. I’m not much of a hardcore mobile gamer, but I did fire up some more demanding titles just to see what happened, and it handled them without any noticeable stutter. Where it really shines, though, is in “PC Mode.”