Microsoft Surface Go Alternatives: The Best Cheap Windows 10 2-in-1s, Tested

Acer cheap laptop

Acer Spin 1 (SP111-32N-C2X3)

Best for Students, Tablet Users, Value Seekers

4.0 Excellent

Bottom Line:

With its wealth of features and super-budget price, the 11.6-inch Acer Spin 1 is an excellent-value 2-in-1 convertible.

PROS

  • Great 1080p touch display.
  • Long battery life.
  • Nice fit and finish.
  • Very usable keyboard and touchpad.
  • Plenty of ports.
  • Active stylus included.

CONS

  • Heavy for its size.
  • Ho-hum VGA webcam.
  • Scanty storage.
  • Performance can be sluggish.

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Amazon

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Asus Transformer Mini (T102HA-D4-GR)

Asus Transformer Mini (T102HA-D4-GR)

Best for Tablet Users, Value Seekers

4.0 Excellent

Bottom Line:

The Asus Transformer Mini T102HA is an excellent, though modest, small tablet that’s handy to have around when you really need Windows rather than Android or iOS.

PROS

  • Compact and light.
  • Comes with keyboard cover and stylus.
  • USB 3.0 port.
  • Fingerprint reader works with Windows Hello.
  • Highly adjustable kickstand.

CONS

  • No USB-C port.
  • Quirky keyboard.
  • Occasionally finicky touchpad.

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Amazon

$379.99

$379.99

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Lenovo Miix 320-10ICR

Lenovo IdeaPad Miix 320

Best for Tablet Users, Value Seekers

4.0 Excellent

Bottom Line:

With a low price and long battery life, the Lenovo IdeaPad Miix 320 is a very well-integrated detachable hybrid that serves equally well as a laptop and a tablet.

PROS

  • Low price.
  • Long battery life.
  • Touch screen.
  • USB-C port.
  • microSD card reader.
  • Sturdy magnetic connector.
  • Real laptop-like feel when paired with keyboard.

CONS

  • Small keyboard could be more comfortable.

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Price

Amazon

$599.77

$599.77

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Acer Switch 3

Acer Switch 3

Best for Value Seekers

4.0 Excellent

Bottom Line:

For half the price of Microsoft’s least-expensive Surface Pro with keyboard cover and stylus, Acer’s Switch 3 offers an appealing 12.2-inch detachable with a winning keyboard and USB-C connectivity.

PROS

  • Comes with keyboard cover and stylus.
  • Typist-friendly keyboard cover.
  • USB-C and USB 3.0 ports.

CONS

  • Underwhelming battery life.
  • 64GB versus rivals’ 128GB of storage.
  • Tiny, difficult-to-push power button.

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Amazon

$759.33

$759.33

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Meet the New Spin 3: A 2-In-1 With a Dash of Alexa

Acer Spin 3 (With Amazon Alexa)

Best for Home Users

3.5 Good

Bottom Line:

Now armed with Alexa, Acer’s Spin 3 convertible is a reasonable value, but its bulky bezels, lack of USB Type-C, and middling typing experience make it a merely average 2-in-1, the Amazon angle aside.

PROS

  • Alexa integration.
  • Punchy performance for the price.
  • Elegant, 360-degree-rotating 1080p touch display.

CONS

  • Thick bezels.
  • No USB Type-C ports.
  • Poor webcam quality.
  • Shallow, non-backlit keyboard.
  • No support for Wake on Voice (WoV).
  • Hefty for a 2-in-1.

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Amazon

$599.00

$549.99

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VivoBook Right Side

Asus VivoBook Flip 14 (TP401CA)

Best for Students, Value Seekers

3.5 Good

Bottom Line:

It doesn’t pack much local storage in our test configuration, but the Asus VivoBook Flip 14 is a long-running, sleek-looking, and sweet-sounding 14-inch convertible laptop.

PROS

  • Sleek aluminum looks.
  • Excellent battery life.
  • Operates in fanless silence.
  • Surprisingly good audio.

CONS

  • Next-to-nil storage space.
  • Limited performance.
  • No keyboard backlighting.
  • Lid flexes some.

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Amazon

$389.90

$389.90

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Lenovo Flex 6 11" Hero

Lenovo Flex 6 11

Best for Students, Value Seekers

3.5 Good

Bottom Line:

Forgive the low-resolution display and ho-hum build, and the Lenovo Flex 6 11 makes for an otherwise well-rounded budget 2-in-1 laptop.

PROS

  • Aggressive price.
  • Sleek, modern look.
  • Comfortable keyboard.
  • Generous port mix, including USB Type-C.
  • Fanless operation.

CONS

  • 1,366 by 768 native display resolution.
  • Plastic chassis.
  • Tricky-to-open lid.
  • Sluggish for anything more than basic tasks.

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Amazon

$199.99

$189.99

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Lenovo

$279.99

$279.99

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With the Surface Go detachable 2-in-1, Microsoft has pushed its Surface tablet line, for the first time, into genuine budget territory. With the lowest-end model coming in at $399 with 64GB of flash storage and no keyboard or stylus, this is, at heart, a basic Windows 10 tablet with a Pentium CPU and flash-based memory. Once you’ve outfitted it with the very minimum to get it to basic laptop functionality, you’re looking at a $500 buy ($99 for the least expensive Surface Type Cover that fits it, plus the cost of the tablet itself). The Surface Pen, meanwhile, will tack on another $99 if you don’t already own one from an earlier Surface. Now you’re at $600.

So, then, you might be wondering, why would you go with the Surface Go, as opposed to certain other budget-minded Windows 10 2-in-1s that come in at well below $500, fully equipped? After all, laptop makers such as Acer, Asus, and Lenovo offer detachables and convertibles with included keyboards and styli for, in a few cases, as little as half the cost of the cheapest Surface Go outfitted with a keyboard cover and the Surface Pen. But as in most things, there’s a clear set of trade-offs when going with the cheapest option.

We’ve rounded up seven of the most popular lower-cost competitors to the Surface Go here that we’ve tested. None is automatically a better choice; it depends on your budget and how you mean to use your 2-in-1. But here’s a rundown of the key things to consider as you look at this field.

Asus Transformer Mini (T102HA-D4-GR)Asus Transformer Mini (T102HA-D4-GR)Asus Transformer Mini (T102HA-D4-GR)

Processors

The Surface Go makes use of a relatively recent Intel Pentium Gold 4415Y CPU. (It was introduced in mid-2017.) This is a two-core/four-thread chip with a 6-watt power envelope. You can’t expect a lot of processing power for media-manipulation activities or tasks that require actual CPU grunt, but the low thermal profile of this chip is necessary in a detachable like this. Because it’s a detachable device, all of the computing guts have to lie behind the screen, and the lower, detachable half is “passive.”

The real power lies in Intel’s Core series of processors, but none of these inexpensive options will include these speedier options. Some of the machines in this list opt for a Celeron chip, a modest but more affordable middle ground, while others will include the bare-budget Atom line. On the whole, these CPUs get the job done for the simpler tasks you’d tend to do on a tablet or budget laptop (web browsing, some word processing, playing music, streaming video, and the like), but don’t expect them to become your new go-to workstation. The Pentiums are tops within this group.

These budget 2-in-1s also include only the low-power graphics acceleration integrated into the CPU, not discrete cards. Gaming machines, these are not, across the board.

Display

With 2-in-1s needing to serve as tablets at least some of the time, and detachable-screen models like the Surface Go meant to be used as tablets more often than revolving-screen ones, the screen sizes on these budget convertibles range almost exclusively from 10.1 to 12.2 inches. Any bigger would make them awkward in tablet mode. But with budget pricing prevailing here, screen resolutions are going to stay on the lower side.

These machines go no higher than 1080p (1,920 by 1,080 pixels). The least expensive among them will drop down to 720p (1,366 by 768 pixels) or 1,280 by 800 pixels, which isn’t ideal, but those resolutions are serviceable for a tiny, affordable tablet, especially if the screen is in the lower end of the size range.

The Surface Go is an outlier, with its 1,800-by-1,200-pixel display, which is roughly equivalent to 1080p in fineness. (This is a native resolution unique to this device; note the 3:2 aspect ratio.) If you care about getting the sharpest screen with the greatest pixel density in its size class, the Surface Go is a strong contender on that front. That said, a more standard 1080p display will be more than adequate for screens this small, and indeed might render things smaller than you like in default mode.

Acer cheap laptopAcer cheap laptop

Acer Spin 1

Storage and Memory

Storage capacities (and types) are a mixed bag on this class of devices, with some of the greatest variances among components. In addition, one product may offer multiple capacities depending on the configuration. (The Surface Go is one of them.)

On the low end are 2-in-1s that include 32GB or 64GB of eMMC flash memory, which may be all you need for some word-processing documents, photos, and other files. (That said, 32GB is inarguably tight, once you factor in the size of Windows 10’s own installation.) The next-larger option may be a solid-state drive (SSD), which in this price range is likely to top out at 128GB. But most inexpensive 2-in-1s opt for eMMC, which is decidedly more sluggish than a “true” SSD.

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How To Buy The Best Laptop

The Surface Go sticks close to the format of its competition, offering 64GB of eMMC flash on the $399 entry model and a 128GB SSD on the pricier version. A 128GB drive should suffice on a device like this, so whichever you choose in this range, you should be covered.

Lenovo Miix 320 10ICR 10Lenovo Miix 320 10ICR 10

Lenovo Miix 320

Base system memory (the RAM amount) presents fewer options: Do you want 2GB or 4GB with that? Most cheap Windows tablets come with one or the other, and that’s basically it. Similar to the CPU situation, 4GB is perfectly fine for most of the tasks you’ll take on with these types of machines. That said, more never hurts, and the Surface Go is unusual in that it offers 8GB with its more expensive SKU. Given that it’s marketed as a bit more PC-like than some of the alternatives, it may make sense to go for the 8GB version, so your applications and load times have a bit more zip, if you mean to use this machine as more than a casual surfing and productivity-app cranker.

Included Accessories

One area the alternatives have the Surface Go beat is the included accessories. Yes, Microsoft’s keyboard, going by the reputation of the Type Covers on the Surface Pro (and our hands-on time with the equivalents on the Surface Go), is higher quality than those of the others, but it doesn’t come with the device, and they aren’t cheap. The least expensive Type Cover for Surface Go costs another $99, the same price as the Surface Pen, so bringing the whole set together gets a bit pricey. (A premium version of the Type Cover for the Surface Go, if you want a fabric-coated version in a color other than black, is $129.)

The 2-in-1s with built-in keyboards obviously don’t have this problem, and some even bundle a stylus (usually, just a passive, nonpowered stick) on top of it. Most other models that, like the Surface Go, have a detachable keyboard include it in the price, which seems like a no-brainer. It’s one of the more frustrating aspects of the Surface Go line, and the Surface Pro before it. Not everyone will need the keyboard, but most folks will.

Acer Switch 3Acer Switch 3

Acer Switch 3 with pen

The pens, also, vary greatly in quality. The Surface Pen will cost you, but it is a high-quality active stylus, with its own power source and deep precision for sketching (supporting 4,096 levels of pressure). Many of the included styli are simple passive stick-style models, okay for basic drawing, poking, and object manipulation but not true artists’ tools.

Given the added cost of the accessories, its more premium build, and components that trend toward the higher end for this category, the Surface Go is not the most budget-friendly choice among low-end 2-in-1s. It’s not costlier without reason, however, offering a nicer build than most. If the extra cost (especially after adding the peripherals) sounds worth it for your needs, you likely won’t be left disappointed. If a low price is your first criterion, though, take a look at the list below of some of our favorite budget 2-in-1s.