Lenovo Unveils Global 14-Inch ThinkPad Featuring a 120Hz OLED Display and Up to 64GB LPCAMM2 Memory

Lenovo has quietly rolled out the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7, a new 14-inch business laptop designed for people who want modern performance without giving up the practical features ThinkPads are known for. One of the biggest talking points is repairability: the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 earned a perfect 10/10 score from iFixit, highlighting how service-friendly the design is compared with many thin-and-light laptops today.

A key upgrade is support for user-replaceable LPCAMM2 memory, giving buyers a more flexible path for RAM upgrades and long-term ownership. Depending on the configuration and region, this model can also be ordered with an OLED display that targets professionals who care about image quality and smooth motion. That optional 2.8K OLED panel is rated at up to 500 nits and supports a variable refresh rate range of 30–120 Hz, which can help with everything from scrolling and productivity workflows to video playback while balancing power usage.

At launch, Lenovo is offering the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 with Intel Panther Lake processors, with multiple CPU choices available. The lineup ranges from Core Ultra 5 options up through higher-tier Core Ultra 7 chips, topping out at the Core Ultra X7 358H. Lenovo has also indicated that AMD versions should arrive later, with configurations expected to reach up to the Ryzen AI 7 Pro 450.

Availability is still uneven. Lenovo hasn’t released North American SKUs yet, listing the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 as “coming soon” on its US and Canadian sites. In other markets, pricing is already in place: the starting configuration is listed from AUD 2,749 in Australia and £1,560 in the UK, while Eurozone pricing begins around €1,719–€1,829 depending on the country.

Base models keep things sensible for business buyers: an Intel Core Ultra 5 325, 16 GB of LPCAMM2 RAM, a 256 GB PCIe Gen 4 M.2 2280 SSD, a 60 Wh battery, and a 1200p IPS display. From there, Lenovo’s configurator opens the door to higher-end builds, including up to 64 GB of RAM, up to a 2 TB PCIe Gen 5 SSD, and a larger 75 Wh battery for those prioritizing longer unplugged time.

There are also several business-focused extras available in certain regions, such as NFC, a fingerprint reader, an IR-capable webcam for face authentication, optional 4G WWAN, a 100 W USB-C power adapter, and more. As expected, fully loaded configurations can become very expensive—reaching AUD 8,019 in Australia, £3,400 in the UK, and roughly €3,899–€3,960 in parts of the Eurozone.

For buyers who want a 14-inch ThinkPad that leans into longevity—upgradeable memory, strong configuration flexibility, and standout repairability—the ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 looks like a meaningful step forward. The biggest remaining question for many shoppers is timing, especially for US and Canada availability and for the eventual AMD-powered models.