Lenovo has begun shipping AMD‑powered ThinkPad P16s Gen 5 laptops in Australia ahead of the planned June rollout, offering configurations with Ryzen AI 5‑440 up to Ryzen AI 9 HX Pro 470, optional Blackwell‑series GPUs, up to 96 GB of ultra‑fast LPCAMM2 memory and a 2.8K OLED display.
Lenovo ThinkPad P16s Gen 5 arrives with AMD CPUs and 96 GB of LPCAMM2 RAM ahead of schedule

Lenovo’s mobile workstation line gets a surprise bump this spring: the ThinkPad P16s Gen 5 is now available with AMD processors in Australia, a few weeks before the company’s official June launch window. The early‑release models replace the Gen 4 unit we reviewed in December 2025 and bring a host of upgrades that push the P16s further into the high‑performance niche.
What’s new?
| Feature | Intel‑based Gen 5 (May launch) | AMD‑based Gen 5 (early release) |
|---|---|---|
| CPU options | Intel Tiger Lake‑H (13th gen) | AMD Ryzen AI 5 Pro 440, Ryzen AI 7 Pro 450, Ryzen AI 9 HX Pro 470 |
| Base RAM | DDR5‑5600, up to 64 GB | LPCAMM2 DDR5‑8533, up to 96 GB |
| GPU | Integrated Intel Iris Xe or optional RTX A5000 | No‑GPU base, optional Nvidia RTX Pro 500/1000/2000 Blackwell GPUs |
| Storage | PCIe 4.0 NVMe, up to 2 TB | PCIe 4.0 or PCIe 5.0 NVMe, up to 4 TB |
| Battery | 60 Wh or 90 Wh | Same options |
| Display | 16‑inch 1080p IPS, 300 nits | 1080p IPS, 2.8K OLED (1800p) 500 nits, 30‑120 Hz variable refresh |
| Starting price (AU) | AUD 3 529 (~$2 522) | AUD 2 979 (~$2 129) |
The headline spec is the LPCAMM2 memory module, a low‑profile, high‑density DDR5 package that runs at 8 533 MT/s. Lenovo offers it in 16 GB, 32 GB, 64 GB and the top‑end 96 GB configuration – the latter being the first time a workstation‑class laptop ships with that much RAM.
Processor lineup
- Ryzen AI 5 Pro 440 – 6 cores / 12 threads, 3.7 GHz boost, integrated Radeon Graphics. Targeted at developers and engineers who need solid multi‑core performance without a discrete GPU.
- Ryzen AI 7 Pro 450 – 8 cores / 16 threads, 4.0 GHz boost, optional external GPU.
- Ryzen AI 9 HX Pro 470 – 12 cores / 24 threads, 4.6 GHz boost, designed for heavy simulation, AI inference and 3‑D rendering workloads.
All three CPUs support AMD’s AI‑accelerated instruction set, which can speed up machine‑learning inference in tools such as TensorFlow Lite and ONNX Runtime when paired with compatible software.
GPU options
The base AMD models ship without a discrete GPU, but the configurator now lists three Nvidia RTX Pro Blackwell options:
- RTX Pro 500 – entry‑level mobile GPU, 8 GB GDDR6, suitable for CAD preview and modest video encoding.
- RTX Pro 1000 – 12 GB GDDR6, adds ray‑tracing cores and Tensor cores for AI‑assisted denoising.
- RTX Pro 2000 – 16 GB GDDR6, the most powerful mobile GPU in the Blackwell family, aimed at professional rendering and simulation.
These GPUs use the newer PCIe 5.0 x4 interface, matching the laptop’s optional PCIe 5.0 SSD slots for maximum bandwidth.
How it compares to the predecessor and rivals
Against the ThinkPad P16s Gen 4
| Aspect | Gen 4 (Dec 2025) | Gen 5 AMD (early) |
|---|---|---|
| CPU | AMD Ryzen 7 6800U (mobile) | Ryzen AI 5‑440 / 7‑450 / 9‑HX 470 |
| Max RAM | 64 GB DDR5‑5600 | 96 GB LPCAMM2‑8533 |
| Storage | PCIe 4.0, up to 2 TB | PCIe 4.0/5.0, up to 4 TB |
| Display | 1080p IPS, 300 nits | 2.8K OLED, 500 nits, 30‑120 Hz |
| Weight | 2.1 kg | ~2.2 kg (OLED adds ~100 g) |
| Price (AU) | AUD 2 699 (review unit) | AUD 2 979 base AMD |
The Gen 5 pushes the memory ceiling by 50 % and adds a true 2.8K OLED panel, which translates to a noticeable boost in colour accuracy and contrast for photo‑editing or UI design work. Battery life remains similar; the 90 Wh option still delivers around 7‑8 hours of mixed usage, despite the higher‑resolution screen.
Against competing workstations
| Laptop | CPU | Max RAM | GPU options | OLED option | Approx. price (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lenovo ThinkPad P16s Gen 5 (AMD) | Ryzen AI 9 HX 470 | 96 GB LPCAMM2 | RTX Pro 2000 Blackwell | 2.8K OLED | $2 300 (base) – $3 500 (max) |
| Dell Precision 7560 | Intel Xeon W‑1290P | 128 GB DDR5‑5600 | RTX A5000 | 4K UHD IPS | $3 200 – $5 000 |
| HP ZBook Fury 16 G9 | Intel i9‑13980HX | 128 GB DDR5‑6400 | RTX A4500 | 4K OLED | $3 600 – $5 800 |
Lenovo’s pricing undercuts the Dell and HP flagships by roughly $1 000 while still offering a higher‑speed memory interface and a Blackwell GPU that outperforms the older RTX A series in AI workloads. The trade‑off is the lack of a Xeon or i9‑level CPU; however, the Ryzen AI 9 HX 470’s 12‑core design and AI extensions make it competitive for most engineering tasks.
Who should consider the early‑release AMD P16s?
- Engineers and data scientists who need massive RAM for large datasets or multi‑instance simulations. The 96 GB LPCAMM2 configuration removes the typical bottleneck of having to offload to slower storage.
- Creative professionals who value colour accuracy and high contrast. The 2.8K OLED panel, combined with Nvidia’s RTX Pro GPUs, provides a solid platform for video editing and 3‑D modelling.
- Businesses looking for a workstation that can be configured with either a modest integrated GPU or a high‑end Blackwell GPU, allowing a single chassis to serve both office‑day and render‑farm roles.
- Early adopters who want the newest AMD AI‑accelerated silicon before the wider market rollout.
If you need a Xeon‑class CPU for certified ISV workloads, the Dell Precision or HP ZBook lines remain the safer bet. For most professional workloads that rely on multi‑core performance, AI inference, and large memory footprints, the ThinkPad P16s Gen 5 AMD variant offers a compelling balance of price, performance and portability.
Pricing note – The Australian configurator shows a base AMD model at AUD 2 979, roughly $2 129 USD. Adding a Blackwell RTX Pro 2000, 96 GB RAM and a 4 TB PCIe 5.0 SSD pushes the price into the $3 500‑$3 800 range. Lenovo has not yet published official pricing for Europe or North America.
For the full specifications sheet, see the Lenovo ThinkPad P16s Gen 5 product page.

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