Apple iPad 11" A16 Silver 2025

★★★★★ 5.0 (11)
CPU Apple A16
Storage 128 GB
Screen 11" 2360x1640
OS Apple iPadOS
Apple iPad 11" A16 Silver 2025 laptop
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Prezzo 0 MXN
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Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

Apple's $500 base iPad gets a big storage upgrade and the A16 chip, landing a gorgeous Liquid Retina display in an absurdly portable design. It's ideal for streaming, note-taking, and everyday tasks, but don't expect it to replace a laptop or handle serious gaming. Performance sits in the bottom quarter of our database, so heavy users should look at the iPad Air or a Windows tablet. For casual use, it's one of the best values in tablets right now.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Stunning 11-inch Liquid Retina display with True Tone, placing in the top quarter of screens we've tested 99th
  • Incredibly portable at 99th percentile compact score, perfect for tossing in a bag 96th
  • iPadOS app ecosystem and solid Apple Pencil support make it a great note-taking and drawing canvas 84th
  • All-day battery life and Wi-Fi 6 keep you connected, with optional 5G if you need it 79th
  • Starts at 128GB for $500, double the base storage of the old model, which feels much more usable

Cons

  • A16 chip sits in the bottom 26th percentile for CPU power, so heavy multitasking can bog it down
  • Only one USB-C port, meaning you'll need dongles for charging and accessories simultaneously
  • Storage tops out at 512GB, and with a 6th percentile ranking, it lags far behind laptops for media hoarders
  • Gaming is borderline unusable for demanding titles, landing in the bottom 5% of all devices we've tested
  • No keyboard or Pencil included, and the Magic Keyboard Folio is a pricey add-on that eats into the savings

What owners think

The proof

Performance

The A16 here is a 5-core chip that was a beast in phones a couple years back, but in tablet land it's more middle-of-the-pack. Our CPU tests place it in the 26th percentile, which translates to "falls behind" when you compare it to the M-series iPads or Windows tablets with Core Ultra chips. For web browsing, Netflix, and tapping through apps, you'll never notice the difference. Everything feels snappy, apps open quick, and the 11-inch screen makes split-view multitasking genuinely useful.

Where you'll feel it is in gaming and anything that pushes the GPU. The integrated graphics sit in the 18th percentile, which is a weak spot. Even older Apple Arcade games run fine, but try a demanding title like Genshin Impact at high settings and you'll see frame drops. And forget about serious video editing; this chip can handle trimming clips in iMovie, but 4K exports will test your patience. RAM is still a mystery from Apple, but given the 14th percentile ranking in our database, we suspect it's 4GB or 6GB, which means apps reload more often than on an iPad Air or Pro.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 26.8
GPU 18.5
RAM 14.4
Ports 33.2
Screen 79.4
Portability 98.8
Storage 6.9
Reliability 96.3
Social Proof 84

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

Cores 5

Memory & Storage

Storage 128 GB

Display

Size 11"
Resolution 2360
Panel IPS

Connectivity

USB-C Ports 1
USB Ports 1
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 6
Bluetooth Bluetooth

Physical

OS Apple iPadOS

vs Competition

If you're cross-shopping, the obvious tablet rival is Samsung's Galaxy Tab S9 FE, which also hovers around the same price and throws in an S Pen. The Samsung has expandable storage and a slightly larger screen, but its Exynos chip gets smoked by the A16 in single-core performance, and Android tablet apps still feel less polished than their iPadOS counterparts. For artists and note-takers, the iPad's Pencil experience and app selection give it a real edge unless you need that included S Pen.

On the laptop side, things like the ASUS ProArt PX13 or Microsoft Surface Go are entirely different beasts. Those are Windows machines that can run desktop software and handle much heavier workloads, but they cost more and aren't as fluid for quick tablet tasks. If you need a device that can replace a laptop for real work, skip the iPad; if you want a best-in-class tablet that sometimes wears a keyboard, this is the one.

Spec Apple iPad 11" A16 ASUS ROG Zephyrus GA403WW-G14.R95080 Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 3 P16 Gen 3 MSI Prestige PRE13EVOA2088 Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro NP940XHA-KG3US HP OmniBook X Flip 14-fk0033dx
CPU Apple A16 AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX Intel Core Ultra 7 258V Intel Core Ultra 7 256V AMD Ryzen AI 7 350
RAM (GB) - 32 128 32 32 24
Storage (GB) 128 2000 4096 1000 1024 1024
Screen 11" 2360x1640 14" 2880x1800 16" 3200x2000 13.3" 2880x1800 14" 2880x1800 14" 1920x1200
GPU - NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 NVIDIA RTX PRO 5000 Blackwell Laptop GPU 24GB GDDR7 Intel Arc Intel Arc AMD Radeon 860M
OS Apple iPadOS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home
Weight (kg) - 1.6 2.5 1 1.2 1.4
Battery (Wh) - - 100 - 15 -
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortScreenCompactStorageReliabilitySocial Proof
Apple iPad 11" A16 26.818.514.433.279.498.86.996.384
ASUS ROG Zephyrus GA403WW-G14.R95080 Compare 86.491.492.266.595.372.79058.397.5
Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 3 P16 Gen 3 Compare 96.789.299.799.597.110.898.778.688.6
MSI Prestige PRE13EVOA2088 Compare 63.76481.282.89095.373.858.385.3
Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro NP940XHA-KG3US Compare 66.96481.266.594.885.581.478.696.3
HP OmniBook X Flip 14-fk0033dx Compare 74.960.28482.871.777.569.431.996.3

Price

Value & Pricing

At $500, this iPad is a steal for what you get if you're a media consumer, student, or casual user. You'd be hard-pressed to find another tablet with this screen quality, build, and software polish at the same price. The base storage bump to 128GB alone makes it a better long-term buy than the previous model, which started at 64GB and practically forced you to juggle apps and offload photos. When you compare it to the $599 iPad Air with M1, you're saving a hundred bucks and still getting a great display, just with a slightly slower chip.

That said, value gets trickier if you plan to add a keyboard and Pencil. The Magic Keyboard Folio costs extra and turns this into a $750+ setup, which is where you start to wonder if a used M1 iPad Air or even a Chromebook with a stylus would give you more for your money. For pure tablet use without the accessories, the price is right on the money.

Read more

Overview

Apple's been on a roll with the base iPad, and the new A16 model keeps that momentum going. You're getting an 11-inch Liquid Retina display, the same A16 chip that powered the iPhone 14 Pro, and a fresh $500 price tag that starts you at 128GB of storage instead of the stingy 64GB of last generation. That combination makes it one of the best entry-level tablets we've seen for everyday use. It's compact enough to slip into a bag without a second thought, and the build quality is exactly what you'd expect from Apple: solid, premium, and a joy to hold.

Who's this for? Students who want a digital notebook and media machine, casual folks who stream shows and browse the web, and anyone who's already deep in the Apple ecosystem. It handles Apple Pencil (the USB-C model or the older 1st-gen with an adapter), the Magic Keyboard Folio, and all the iPadOS multitasking tricks that make it feel more productive than a basic Android tablet. The 99th percentile compact score in our database confirms what you can see at a glance: this thing is incredibly portable.

But here's the reality check. While the display and design are fantastic, the A16 chip is a few years old now, and it lands in the bottom quarter of our performance rankings when you stack it against laptops and high-end 2-in-1s. That's fine for streaming, note-taking, and light photo editing, but don't mistake this for a powerhouse. The $500 price puts it in a sweet spot, but you need to know exactly what you're getting into.

Common Questions

Q: Is the Apple iPad A16 compatible with the Apple Pencil?

Yes, it works with the Apple Pencil (USB-C) which attaches magnetically but charges via USB-C, and it also supports the older 1st-generation Apple Pencil using a USB-C to Lightning adapter. The Pencil experience is smooth for note-taking and drawing, though it lacks the pressure sensitivity and wireless charging of the 2nd-gen Pencil found on the Air and Pro models.

Q: Can the A16 chip handle multitasking and Stage Manager on iPadOS?

The A16 handles basic multitasking like split-view and slide-over just fine, but full external display support and the advanced Stage Manager feature are reserved for M-series iPads. You can still run two apps side by side and use Picture-in-Picture video, but don't expect to dock it to a monitor and treat it like a desktop the way an iPad Air or Pro would.

Q: Is 128GB of storage enough for a tablet?

For most people, yes. 128GB gives you room for dozens of apps, hours of offline Netflix downloads, and a decent photo library. If you shoot a lot of 4K video or want to store massive games, you might feel the squeeze, but the base model is now much more livable than the old 64GB configuration. There's also a 512GB option if you need more, though cloud storage can fill the gap for many.

Q: How does this compare to the iPad Air for gaming?

The iPad Air's M1 chip crushes the A16 in both CPU and graphics performance, so if you plan on playing demanding games like Genshin Impact, Divinity: Original Sin 2, or any Apple Arcade title at high settings, the Air is worth the extra cost. The A16 iPad is fine for casual games and older titles, but its GPU is a weak spot compared to other recent Apple silicon.

Who Should Skip This

If you're a gamer who wants to run anything more demanding than simple puzzle games, look elsewhere. The A16's GPU sits near the bottom of our charts, and even mid-range Android tablets with dedicated graphics can outpace it. Creative pros who edit 4K video, work with large Photoshop files, or juggle dozens of tabs while streaming should also pass: the limited RAM and CPU will have you staring at loading wheels. Instead, grab an M1 iPad Air or, if you're on a budget, a used iPad Pro from a previous generation. These will handle real work without breaking a sweat.

Also, if you need a laptop replacement and can't stomach the cost of a Magic Keyboard Folio, a Chromebook like the Lenovo IdeaPad Duet might be a better fit. It gives you a keyboard and trackpad in the box for less money, even if the screen and app selection aren't as polished.

Verdict

For the student who scribbles notes in class, unwinds with YouTube after dinner, and occasionally fires up a lightweight game, this iPad is borderline perfect. It nails the essentials: gorgeous screen, all-day battery, and a price that doesn't make you wince. Pair it with Apple Pencil and you've got a fantastic digital notebook that will last you through years of iOS updates.

But if your day involves editing 4K video, running complex spreadsheets, or playing the latest AAA ports, steer clear. The A16 just doesn't have the muscle for that. You'd be better off saving up for an iPad Air with M1 or looking at a compact Windows 2-in-1 that can actually chew through those workloads.

Usage Scores

Overall (51.5)Ai Llm (18.4)Gaming (5.4)Compact (73.1)Creator (20.1)Student (59.9)Business (62.9)Developer (43.3)Entertainment (58.4)

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