Notebook Review
Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 4 Review: Premium Mobile Workstation, Premium Price

Editor's note: This is an original English adaptation based on the Notebook-Center.ru review published on February 01, 2022, rewritten for Notebook Center's English overview archive.
Overview
The ThinkPad P1 Gen 4 exists for buyers who need workstation performance but do not want a traditional oversized mobile workstation. Lenovo combines a Core i9-11950H, RTX A5000 graphics with 16 GB of VRAM, a 16-inch 4K display, and a still-manageable 1.8 kg travel weight. The source review frames it honestly: the machine is impressive, but the price of roughly $7000 means buyers need a real professional use case.
Technical Specifications
| Processor | Intel Core i9-11950H 2600 MHz |
|---|---|
| Memory | 32 GB DDR4 3200 MHz |
| Storage | 1024 GB SSD |
| Display | 16" 3840x2400 WQUXGA LED IPS, matte |
| Graphics | Intel UHD Graphics Xe, NVIDIA GeForce RTX A5000 16 GB GDDR6 |
| Wireless | Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2 |
| Audio | Dolby Atmos, 2 stereo speakers |
| Ports | 2xUSB 3.2, 2xThunderbolt 4, HDMI, SD card reader SD, combined audio jack |
| Extras | 1080p IR webcam, fingerprint scanner |
| Battery | Li-pol 90 Wh |
| Size and weight | 359x254x17.7 mm, 1.8 kg |
| OS | Windows 10 Pro 64-bit |
| Configuration | Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 4 (20Y3006FRT) |
Design and Usability
Portability is a major part of the appeal. The chassis is thin for its class, the weight is relatively restrained, and the overall presentation stays consistent with the ThinkPad identity: dark, understated, and work-focused. That matters because buyers shopping at this level often need power that can travel between offices, studios, and client visits.
Display and Everyday Experience
The 16-inch 3840x2400 display gives the notebook the kind of workspace high-end professional users expect, whether they work in CAD, editing, or visual production. Lenovo also includes a 1080p IR webcam and fingerprint reader, which strengthen the business and enterprise angle instead of treating security as an afterthought.
Performance
Performance is the defining argument. An RTX A5000-class GPU in a notebook shifts the P1 well beyond mainstream creator laptops and into serious professional territory. Combined with the Core i9 and 32 GB of memory, the platform is built for demanding software rather than light consumer multitasking. This is workstation hardware in the full sense of the term.
Ports and Battery
The connectivity mix is appropriately premium: Thunderbolt 4, HDMI, SD access, and standard USB cover most pro workflows without immediate dependence on a dock. A 90 Wh battery is also generous for such a powerful notebook, though no buyer should expect workstation-class performance and workstation-class battery life at the same time.
Verdict
The ThinkPad P1 Gen 4 is easier to admire than to justify. Its combination of power, mobility, and screen quality is excellent, and the ThinkPad platform remains a trusted base for serious work. But the cost is high enough that this is only a rational purchase when the workload clearly demands it.