It’s one of the cheapest laptops you’ll find to use an Intel Core-series processor, instantly solving many of the most serious day-to-day problems you’ll run into using a cheap computer. If your laptop fund is limited, you can’t argue with this bargain machine. 

Price when reviewed

The 250 G5 is actually a range of laptops with various different specifications, and was previously called the 250 G4. You can save a bit if you go for the model with 4GB rather than 8GB of RAM, and a traditional hard drive rather than an SSD. It’s around £30 cheaper and has 1TB of storage. There are also higher-spec versions including Core i7 processors if you’re willing to spend between £400 and £500. That sort of spec is going to give you Windows performance comparable with a much more expensive laptop. It may not have it all, but this laptop offers plenty of pep for your pound. Also see: Best Laptop Deals

Features and design

If you’re thinking this laptop looks quite familiar, that’s because it has been around for a long time. HP has retained the same design for a couple of years: it isn’t out to thrill – it’s a tool, a workhorse.  Note that unlike older versions of this laptop, the 250 G5 does not have a DVD drive. None of this matters one jot if you’re simply after a basic laptop with good performance for little money. Decked out in black and very dark grey, many will think it’s boring. But there are some little aesthetic gems. There’s an embossed pattern on the lid and a texture on the keyboard surround. Both look good when they catch the light, but their biggest benefit is in putting a sensory layer between your fingers and the basic plastic that makes up the HP 250 G5’s shell. You’d probably guess this was a cheaper laptop, but it doesn’t feel hugely cheap. No part of the laptop flexes much under finger pressure and the hinge feels very solid. Treat it rough and the mechanical hard drive would probably fail before the shell becomes too damaged. You won’t want to take it out too often anyway. This is not a hugely portable laptop. It weighs 2.14kg and the 15.6in frame just isn’t going to fit easily into a lot of bags. If you’re after something to use on-the-go, check out a 13.3-inch display laptop or smaller first. This is the sort of laptop you can use as your main machine, not least because it has a good spread of connections for a cheaper model. There are three USB ports (1x USB 3.0, 2x USB 2.0), an SD card slot, and Ethernet port and both VGA and HDMI video outputs. HP has clearly designed this machine knowing that some of you will want to plug in a monitor and keyboard/mouse.

Keyboard and trackpad

Typical of the practical style, the keyboard and trackpad are decent. The keyboard is a standard design, also fitting a number pad to the right side of the normal keys. Key travel is a little shallow and feedback on the soft side, but it’s still clearly-defined and non-spongy. None of the G5’s keys have been radically shaved down or moved too silly positions either. Like the build, the keyboard is not fancy, but solid. Like other laptops at this price, there’s no backlight. At first glance the trackpad appears far more unusual. The pad isn’t separated from the keyboard surround. It’s part of it. This is not the nicest surface for a trackpad, and is one of the few disappointments of this laptop. Something a bit smoother would give the machine a much less budget feel. From a pure practical perspective, the trackpad is fine, though. Its buttons are separated out, sitting below the pad in a plastic bar. A nice little touch, the right button requires a much lighter press than the left one, a conscious nod to the fact you’re more likely to be pressing it with a digit other than your index finger.

Screen

Typical of an entry-level laptop, G5 has a basic screen. It’s 15.6 inches across and 1366 x768 pixel resolution. This is the sort of screen that has been used in laptops for well over a decade. It’s not very sharp. Its colour is clearly undersaturated, making the display look a little anaemic. Our colorimeter tells us it hits just 55.2 percent of the sRGB gamut, which is poor but predictable given we’re looking at a pocket-money PC. Horizontal viewing angles are passable, suffering from some loss of brightness, but it’s only the vertical angle that causes the contrast shift we associate with the TN LCD panel used here. If you need more proof that this isn’t a laptop to get if you want to avoid having to buy a TV, its native contrast is just 200:1, which is pretty dismal. However, when used in a lit room, all you will notice is that the colours are a bit weak. The screen looks its best when there’s a decent amount of ambient light, letting the reflection-busting matt finish show off what it can do. Maximum brightness is pretty good, and the fact that the screen has a matt finish means you can use the laptop nearby a bright window or outdoors.

Performance

A bad screen is something you are just going to have to accept if you want to spend well under £500. But the 250 G5 does have great internals for the money, though, regardless of which precise model you choose. With an Intel Core i3-5005U (dual-core, 2GHz) processor and 8GB of RAM, there are almost no creaky pauses as Windows 10 goes about its daily business. It’s refreshing to see such an affordable laptop whose general performance does not feel compromised, a legitimate budget machine that can handle genuine multi-tasking without becoming a chore to use. And as we mentioned at the top, you can pay a little extra and get a Core i5 version or even i7 that should see performance increase by a good chunk. For the Core i3 version we tested, its PCMark 8 score of 2171 is much closer to that of a high-end laptop than the circa-1000 score you might see from some of the Celeron-based laptops that sit around the £200-250 mark. As long as you’re not expecting a powerhouse PC, you should be very happy. We can’t overstate the difference between the performance of an Intel Core i3 with 8GB RAM and a Celeron with 2/4GB RAM. The Core i3 here is a 5th-gen processor rather than a newer 6th- or 7th-gen one. But there are models of the 250 G5 that do have 6th-gen Skylake chips, and we recommend hunting down those models if you can handle the extra price. Also, a Skylake CPU would get you slightly better gaming performance. At lowest settings, 720p resolution, Alien: Isolation is almost playable, reaching an average 18.6fps. Really cut the settings down to their bare bones and you can reach 24.5fps (average). Some might consider that acceptable, but this isn’t meant to be a gaming laptop. Our other standard gaming test, Thief, is a bust too. At Low settings you’ll get 12.8fps, which is really too low to be any fun. If you only have a few hundred pounds and want to do some gaming, buy a PS4 or Xbox One. Although it may be tempting to save money and go for a model with a 1TB hard drive, this is much slower at juggling bits and pieces of data and makes Windows 10 noticeably less responsive.

Battery Life

This laptop isn’t designed for amazing battery life. The battery unit can be removed, though, held in place with a clip at the back of the underside. This is a very traditional design. Battery life is on the higher-end of what you might expect for from a very conventional 15.6-inch laptops. It lasts for five hours when playing a 720p MP4 video, which is similar stamina to what you’d get while writing documents and doing the odd bit of browsing. It’s not all-day stamina, but is respectable for a full-size machine.

Audio and other considerations

Finally, we come to sound quality. The HP 250 G4 has two speakers that sit on the underside of the laptop, and their output varies hugely on whether you use the Dolby DSP software or not. Without it, the output is weak and quiet. With it, the sound has a lot more mid-range power, and seems fuller. However, it also involves a lot of compression, meaning the volume of parts of a music track seems to go up and down as the arrangement becomes busier or more sparse. It also sounds boxy, but the extra weight to the sound is all-but necessary. There are no such positive notes for the webcam, though, which is VGA and produces a very soft-looking image. HP has bunged a camera in here expecting very few people to use it.

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