- Qualcomm unveiled the Snapdragon C platform for entry-tier Windows laptops “targeting $300 and up,” shipping later this year.
- It brings ARM battery life to the budget tier — but it sits below the Copilot+ bar, with Kryo cores and an NPU under 40 TOPS, so no Copilot+ AI features.
- Acer, HP, and Lenovo are the named partners; near that price in the Philippines these should land around Php 20k if not less.
Qualcomm is bringing its battery-life edge to cheap laptops. It announced the Snapdragon C Platform for entry-tier Windows machines “targeting $300 and up,” according to Qualcomm, with Acer, HP, and Lenovo building the first devices and shelves expected later this year.
The Snapdragon X line already showed ARM Windows laptops can outlast Intel on battery while keeping up on everyday work, but those were premium Copilot+ machines. Snapdragon C moves ARM into the budget tier for the first time. It’s built on Qualcomm’s Kryo cores rather than the high-end Oryon, and its NPU sits below the 40-TOPS threshold Microsoft requires for Copilot+ — so the platform gets the battery and everyday speed of ARM, without the on-device-AI features Copilot+ enables.
| Spec | Qualcomm Snapdragon C Platform |
|---|---|
| Segment | Entry-tier ARM for Windows 11 |
| Target price | Devices from ~$300 (~Php 17k) |
| CPU | Kryo cores (below the Oryon-based X line) |
| AI | NPU below 40 TOPS — no Copilot+ |
| Partners | Acer, HP, Lenovo |
| Ships | Later in 2026 |
The standing question for any ARM Windows machine is software compatibility. Snapdragon X devices handle most mainstream apps natively or through emulation, but edge cases remain — niche local software, some accounting and enterprise tools. At $300 or about Php 18,500, the expectation is that everything a school or office uses simply runs.
On battery, ARM laptops consistently outlast the entry Intel machines that dominate the sub-Php 20k shelf, which typically manage four to six hours of real use. Qualcomm says Snapdragon C devices ship later this year globally; Philippine stock for new chips usually trails by three to six months, and whether Acer, HP, or Lenovo bring their models to the country isn’t yet confirmed.

