Search  for anything...
HP

HP 2023 Newest for Business and Student Laptop, 17.3" HD+ Touch Display, Intel Pentium Silver-N5030(4-core), 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD, 1-Year Office 365, Long Battery Life, Webcam, Wi-Fi, Win 11 H in S

  • Based on 1,519 reviews
Condition: New
Checking for product changes
$439.99 Why this price?

Buy Now, Pay Later


As low as / mo
  • – Up to 36-month term with PayTomorrow
  • – No impact on credit
  • – Instant approval decision
  • – Secure and straightforward checkout

Ready to go? Add this product to your cart and select a plan during checkout. Payment plans are offered through our trusted finance partners Klarna, PayTomorrow, Affirm, Afterpay, Apple Pay, and PayPal. No-credit-needed leasing options through Acima may also be available at checkout.

Learn more about financing & leasing here.

Selected Option

Free shipping on this product

30-day easy returns

To qualify for a full refund, items must be returned in their original, unused condition. If an item is returned in a used, damaged, or materially different state, you may be granted a partial refund.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.


Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by 82 days

Arrives Jun 6 – Jun 10
Order within 13 hours and 48 minutes
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Style: 8GB RAM | 256GB SSD


Features

  • Immersive Touchscreen LuxuryImmerse yourself in the brilliance of a 17.3-inch diagonal HD+ touchscreen display that not only captivates your senses but also responds to your touch with seamless precision. Elevate your computing experience with a dynamic display that matches your versatility.
  • Unleashed Productivity AnywhereExperience the freedom of extended battery life with the HP 17.3" HD+ Touchscreen Laptop. Enjoy the liberty to conquer your day without constantly needing to recharge. Ideal for wireless streaming, this laptop ensures uninterrupted productivity or entertainment on the go.
  • Effortless Multitasking and Storage MasteryBoost your productivity with up to 32GB DDR4 RAM, ensuring your laptop keeps up with your demands. Paired with configurations offering up to 2TB SSD, relish faster data access and ample storage, effortlessly managing your files and applications.
  • Versatile Connectivity HubStay plugged in and connected with a versatile array of ports, including the convenience of 1 USB Type-C (data transfer only), 2 USB Type-A, 1 HDMI, and a headphone/microphone combo jack. The addition of an AC smart pin for the power adapter enhances convenience, providing versatile connectivity for all your devices.
  • Windows 11 Home in S Mode SecurityStep into the future of computing with Windows 11 Home in S Mode. Benefit from swift boot times, heightened responsiveness, and advanced protection against phishing and malware. Delight in a secure and efficient computing environment for all your daily tasks, promising a seamless and worry-free experience.

Description

Statement:Original Seal is opened for upgrade ONLY. If the computer has modifications, then the manufacturer box is opened for it to be tested and inspected and to install the upgrades to achieve the specifications as advertised.Brand: HPSeries: HP Laptop Processor Brand: Intel Processor: Intel Pentium Silver-N5030Processor Model Number: N5030 Processor Core: 4-CoreProcessor Speed (up to): 3.10 GHzGraphics: Intel UHD Graphics 600Graphics Type: IntegratedOperating System: Windows 11 Home in S mode Screen Size: 17.3 inchesScreen Resolution: 1600 x 900Memory: Up to 32GB RAMType of Memory (RAM): DDR4Storage Type: SSDHard Drive: Up to 2TB SSDWireless Connectivity: Wi-Fi, BluetoothColor: SilverPorts & Slots:1 x USB Type-C® (supports data transfer only)2 x USB Type-A1 x HDMI1 x Headphone/microphone combo1 x AC smart pin for power adapter (included) Dimensions: 15.78" x 10.15" x 0.78"Weight: 4.6 pounds

Brand: HP


Model Name: HP Laptop


Screen Size: 17.3 Inches


Color: Silver


Hard Disk Size: 256 GB


CPU Model: Pentium


Ram Memory Installed Size: 8 GB


Operating System: Windows 11 S


Graphics Card Description: Integrated


Graphics Coprocessor: Intel UHD Graphics 600


Standing screen display size: ‎17.3 Inches


Screen Resolution: ‎1600 x 900 pixels


Max Screen Resolution: ‎1600x900 Pixels


Processor: ‎3.1 GHz pentium


RAM: ‎DDR4


Hard Drive: ‎256 GB SSD


Graphics Coprocessor: ‎Intel UHD Graphics 600


Chipset Brand: ‎Intel


Card Description: ‎Integrated


Wireless Type: ‎802.11a/b/g/n/ac


Number of USB 3.0 Ports: ‎3


Brand: ‎HP


Series: ‎HP Laptop


Item model number: ‎HP Laptop


Operating System: ‎Windows 11 S


Item Weight: ‎4.6 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎15.78 x 0.78 x 10.15 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎15.78 x 0.78 x 10.15 inches


Color: ‎Silver


Processor Brand: ‎Intel


Number of Processors: ‎4


Computer Memory Type: ‎DDR4 SDRAM


Hard Drive Interface: ‎Solid State


Power Source: ‎Battery Powered


Date First Available: December 5, 2023


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Jun 6 – Jun 10

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

  • Klarna Financing
  • Affirm Pay in 4
  • Affirm Financing
  • Afterpay Financing
  • PayTomorrow Financing
  • Apple Pay Later
Leasing options through Acima may also be available during checkout.

Learn more about financing & leasing here.

Top Amazon Reviews


  • Superb laptop for the money - After you remove the crapware
I just bought my nephew who is going to college an HP Stream 13 for $230. Beautiful and powerful computer, but it took me 90 minutes to remove all the stickers and all the crapware & adware. I still need to offload the recovery partition to a flash disk to recover the SSD storage. It has a total of 32 GB SSD storage so every bit counts. I'm also waiting for a 64 GB MicroSD card http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00IVPU7AO so I can expand the storage. Removing the crapware and adware took 2 hours plus another hour to install Windows update. I removed all the browser extensions and add-ons in IE and then installed Chrome. Then I installed CCleaner and removed McAfee anti-virus so that I can just use the free Microsoft AV. Also removed a bunch of bloatware like Cisco wireless networking utilities like LEAP and Apple Bonjour. Removed the Realtek card reader software since it slows the card reader down. Then downloaded fresh Realtek card reader driver and manually installed the driver without using their setup program. UPDATE - I had to remove all the HP tools (support and registration) as well. They were intermittently hammering the CPU to 100% and other people in HP forums were complaining about this problem. Once uninstalled, the CPU usage problems went away. Something else that caused some mildly high CPU usage during media playback was the Realtek DTS audio processing service and I've disabled that and the system performs better. It was not needed for playback quality and it was actually detrimental to audio recording quality. The thing that slowed me down was that I had to gather my nephew's personal info to create a Microsoft account for him. It was mandatory since this is the free version of MS Windows 8.1 (with Bing). But the MS Account allows him to use MS Office online for free so it's worth setting up. I also had to carefully remove 3 stickers on the keyboard rest. Intel sticker was tilted. Now it's a beautiful clean system and it boots very fast and loads everything fast. It handles most computing tasks just fine and now I'm loathed to give this away. Some people will complain about the 2GB of RAM which is not expandable, but I never have any problems with 2GB RAM because I don't leave a 20 browser tabs open. You're not going to use this laptop for 3D intensive gaming or 3D rendering so the RAM shouldn't be an issue. I have a desktop computer with 8 GB of RAM for running games and virtual machines and content production and no one should expect the HP Stream 13 to perform this role. It runs fewer than 10 web browser tabs just fine and it's extremely snappy running Microsoft Office Online or Google apps. I ran a Youtube 1080P on Chrome browser. Google is screwing all of us now by forcing their VP9 codec on us which forces this computer to use software video decoding. This dual-core CPU is pegged at 100% utilization and forced to overclock to 2.58 GHz and it will still hiccup if a youtube ad shows up. Of course this is just chewing up the battery. By comparison, I tested a 1080P H.264 .MP4 video downloaded from Google and the CPU hovered around 8% during smooth playback. Google needs to shove their VP8 & VP9 codec where the sun don't shine. But thank goodness for "Magic Actions for YouTube" (a Chrome plugin) letting me disable Google's VP9 HTML5 crap. Now Chrome runs Youtube in flash mode with H.264 hardware decoding and the CPU hovers around 20%. Here's a screenshot of the CPU pegged at 100% with VP9 software decode [...]. Here's the CPU hovering at 20% using Flash mode with H.264 hardware decode [...]. I've been hammering on this system with tests for over two hours. The Intel N2840 2.16 GHz processor is being forced to burst to 2.58 GHz from all the work I'm throwing at it. Windows Update is hammering the IO and CPU. The brightness level is even set to 60% and the battery level still reads 79% with 4 hours 24 minutes remaining. After all the tweaks and cleanup I've done, the slim HP Stream 13 3.42 lb laptop is running smooth as butter. The 13.3" 1366x768 non-glare matte screen is the perfect compromise between viewabiliy and compactness. Would be even nicer if HP could sell us a 1920x1080 13.3" screen but probably not at the $230 price point. Another small gripe is that the bezel is a little bigger than I'd like. The Stream 13 has a 720P webcam, but I wouldn't even call it 360P quality. It's incredibly grainy using indoor lighting, but what were you expecting for a $230 laptop? It's certainly not going to look like the camera on the MacBook Pro. Get yourself a $66 Logitech C920 which has awesome image quality and 1080P hardware encoding if you want a nice webcam. Even a $29 720P webcam will look leaps and bounds better. On the audio output side, the HP Stream 13 has good sound output from the TRRS jack. It can drive my large 808 headphones with authority. By comparison, my Lenovo ThinkPad T430 business laptop couldn't push my 808s at all! The audio recording on the other hand stinks in the default setting. The integrated microphone sucks like most integrated microphones on laptops. It is very laggy because of all the noise cancellation algorithms they apply to it. The recorded sound (using Audacity) is noise free but it is extremely unnatural due to excessive noise reduction. I don't like the recorded sound at all. UPDATE - After disabling the DTS Realtek audio processing, the playback quality was still just as good. Recording with the internal microphone actually improved a lot. The internal microphone in the HP Stream 13 actually isn't too shabby. It is surprisingly usable quality for VoIP or Video Calling. The Stream 13 also has a 3.5mm TRRS phone connector port for headphones and earbuds with microphones. That means you can use the same earbuds with mic that you use with your smartphone. The problem is that while it sounds a lot more natural than the integrated microphone, it's a faint yet noisy signal. The input volume was set to 100% with a 10 dB (fake software preamp) boost and it's still only reaching 20% peak sound levels in Audacity. My Nexus 4 and Samsung S4 on the other hand produce extremely good quality recordings with the same earbuds or headphones with microphones. To put this in context, my Lenovo ThinkPad T430 from work has the same audio recording quality problems with the integrated mic and TRRS port. If you want to work around these sound recording issues, buy yourself a $34 Samson GoMic. It's the best money you'll ever spend on a USB microphone. The other option is that you can get a bluetooth headphone with microphone since the HP Stream 13 has bluetooth capability. The trackpad on the HP Stream 13 is large and usable. It supports gestures like two-finger scrolling. But if you really want a good experience, buy a bluetooth mouse and use the integrated bluetooth in the Stream 13. Lastly, here are the disk performance results for the internal 32 GB SSD storage. It's one of the slowest SSDs on the market, but it's still around 15 times faster than a normal hard drive when it comes to small file transfers. [...] Conclusion: This is a superb mobility laptop for the money, but only if you remove all the crapware and apply all the optimizations I performed above. Summary of crapware removed and optimizations performed. * Apple Bonjour. * Cisco LEAP and EAPFAST * McAfee AV * Realtek cardreader software (note that you need to download just the new drivers and then just install drivers manually without software. Don't remove if you don't know how to install new drivers because you'll lose the card reader) * HP Tools registration * HP Tools support * Disable Realtek DTS audio effects. Just type DTS at start screen and the program will pop up. * Install Chrome * If you use Chrome, install "Magic Actions for YouTube" plugin for Chrome to disable ads, pick the default resolution, and force Flash mode instead of HTML5 mode. Flash mode uses H.264 MPEG AVC video which supports hardware acceleration for very low CPU usage. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2014 by George Ou

  • Great Notebook, once you remove the crapware
Love it! Lightweight, much more appealing than your average gray or black notebook. More attractive in real life than in the photo. As others said, the drawback is, it comes loaded to the hilt with crapware, so be ready to delete out many programs you don't need or want. Some reviewers are pretty advanced, and recommend deleting even the HP support-ware and Realtek card reader etc. Do NOT do this unless you really know what you're doing! IF you delete the cardreader, for example, and haven't pre-installed a driver that will work, you will not be able to connect with the internet at all, and will have to do an entire reinstall from scratch. That said, it's pretty easy to go to "uninstall programs" through your Control Panel, and pick anything that's clearly 3rd party not-wanted, and uninstall it. On your list of pre-installed apps on the desktop, you can also right-click on anything you don't want, and pick "uninstall" as an option (on most anyway). Don't worry about deleting anything essential doing that. If you try to delete something protected, you'll be transferred to the main Control Panel and you can bail from there. I don't even want the free one-year Microsoft Office, as after you're hooked on Office-crack, you'll be paying for it monthly forever. Some might need it for college or work, but we don't need spreadsheets or power point, or most other things. We only want a simple word processor. For that, there are a lot of good apps, many free, that will read (and write) Microsoft-Word-compatible docs. Also, Microsoft is notorious for aggressive updates to your comes-with Windows 8-1 operating system. You can be in the middle of something, and suddenly find your computer in their control. It slows everything down for hours on end, then arbitrarily shuts down, and can take 15 minutes or more to restart and update. Grrrrrrr! I go into preferences, and turn off ALL auto update features from Microsoft. Once a month, I manually check for updates, and then let them install while I don't need the computer. Another thing: I don't like Microsoft making me use Internet Explorer and therefore, Bing as a search engine. The only time I used IE was to download Firefox. It that browser, under preferences, you can make up your own mind which search engine(s) you will use. I like Google for that, I use Yahoo for mail, and I do a lot of research on Wikipedia -- and I like to make my own choices, not have Microsoft ram theirs down my throat. It takes a little time to customize, but worth it in the end. Also, while I have one of my choices running, it's icon is in the taskbar: if you right-click the icon, you have the option to pin it to the taskbar so it's easy to find again (and unpin anything that was pre-loaded). Oh yeah: I turned of the trial "cloud" program as well. Things are uncertain enough on the internet, without giving all your files to some 3rd party, who might just turn out to be some government or other! No thank you. By the way, the anti-virus "Windows Defender" comes free with your HP, so you don't need to buy anything else. You will have to uninstall the "trial" version of -- Mcafee I think it was -- that came with. It asked several times if I was sure, yes I was, and it's gone. Back to the HP Stream13 itself: the keyboard is small, but easy to use. The screen provides excellent resolution. For such a small notebook, the pad is large and responsive. I set this up and gave it to my wife: she mostly just does email, goes shopping online, checks the bank, and writes the odd letter, so the cleaned-up harddrive is plenty big enough. She loves it! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2015 by Wilderness Family

Can't find a product?

Find it on Amazon first, then paste the link below.