The split
Two design philosophies, not one spec sheet
The remarkable vs boox question almost never gets answered well, because most comparisons line up specs side by side and forget the brands aren’t trying to do the same thing. reMarkable is a deliberately locked-down focus tablet. Boox is an open Android e-ink platform. Those are different products solving different problems, and the spec sheet only matters once you’ve picked the right philosophy.
reMarkable’s promise is subtractive. The device runs a custom OS, refuses third-party apps, and has no browser, no email, no notifications, no Kindle. You write, you read what you’ve put on it, you sync to the cloud, and you put it down. The whole point is that it can’t distract you because it has nothing to distract you with.
Boox runs Android. You can install Kindle, Kobo, Libby, OneNote, Notion, Obsidian, a browser, a PDF annotator, anything in the Play Store that runs on e-ink. Some Boox devices have color. Some are 6 inches and fit in a pocket. Some are 13 inches and replace a paper notebook outright. The promise is that one device covers reading, writing, web, and apps, in e-ink form.
If you don’t have an opinion on which of those promises matters to you, the rest of this comparison won’t help. Pick the philosophy first.
Writing
Where reMarkable still wins on writing
If the device is mostly going to live as a writing surface, reMarkable is honestly hard to beat. The texture of the display, the weight and balance of the Marker pens, the latency on a stroke, all of it has been tuned for one job. People who switch from a Boox to a reMarkable Paper Pro almost always say the same thing about the pen feel, and they’re not wrong.
The OS helps. Open the device, your last notebook is there. No app picker, no widget, no Android settings tray. Notifications can’t show up because there are no notifications. The friction between thinking something and writing it down is roughly zero. That sounds small until you spend a week on a tablet that can ping you.
Boox can write well. The Note Air series and the Note Max have decent surfaces and good Wacom-tier pens, and several Boox devices match reMarkable on raw latency benchmarks. What they don’t match is the writing-first OS. On Boox you’re always one swipe away from a Kindle book, a Slack message, a YouTube tab loading at three frames per second. That’s a feature for some people. It’s a bug if you’re trying to think.
Flexibility
Where Boox earns the wider appeal
Boox covers a range reMarkable doesn’t. The Palma is a 6-inch e-ink phone-sized reader that fits in a back pocket. The Go 10.3 is a thin reader-writer at the same size as the reMarkable 2, often around half the price. The Note Air 4C and 5C add color, which reMarkable Paper Pro does too, but Boox got there cheaper. The Note Max is 13.3 inches, which is closer to a small magazine than a notebook. Pick the form factor that matches the work.
The Android side matters more than people give it credit for. If you read on Kindle, the Boox runs Kindle. If you read on Kobo, the Boox runs Kobo. If your team uses OneNote, the Boox runs OneNote. If you want a browser to read long-form articles in Reader Mode, the Boox has a browser. None of that is possible on reMarkable, by design.
Price is the third axis. A new Boox Go 10.3 typically lands around $380. A new reMarkable 2 was $399 before it was discontinued, and the replacement Paper Pure at the same size sits at $399 as well. The Note Air 4C is around $500 with the pen; the reMarkable Paper Pro is $629 with marker. For a household running two devices, the math compounds.
Boox covers a range reMarkable doesn’t. Pick the form factor that matches the work, then pick the brand.From this comparison
Side-by-side
The pair, side by side (lead models)
The cleanest way to compare the brands is to put their flagship-color models head to head. Paper Pro is the device most reMarkable buyers default to in 2026; Note Air 4C is the equivalent default for Boox. All other models in each line tilt toward smaller, cheaper, or larger versions of the same idea.
The headline trade-off is in the bottom row. Paper Pro is faster on the surface and slower at every other task. Note Air 4C is the inverse: a touch slower with the pen, an order of magnitude more flexible everywhere else. If you only used one of these for writing, reMarkable wins. If you needed it to also be the device you read on, the Boox is doing two jobs.
Specs and materials
Specs and materials, down to the millimetre
Specs become more meaningful tab by tab. The same two devices on materials, file format compatibility, and what each one’s pen feels like in the hand.
reMarkable Paper Pro
Aluminium unibody in anodised charcoal. Front bezel uses a textured composite that doesn’t show fingerprints. The Marker is aluminium with a steel weighted core, magnetic side-attach.
Boox Note Air 4C
Aluminium back with a polycarbonate front bezel. Lighter in the hand than Paper Pro by around 100 g. The Pen2 Pro has a soft-touch barrel and a magnetic eraser cap.
File formats opened natively
Third-party app support
Latency
Pen latency, head to head
Pen latency is the one number that matters most for daily writing. Below the perceptual threshold (~20 ms) you stop noticing it; above it, the screen feels like it’s catching up to you. Numbers below are typical figures from third-party slow-motion testing, lower is better.
Pen latency by stroke type (ms, lower is better)
Reading the chart honestly: Paper Pro is faster on every stroke type, and noticeably so on hatching where Boox crosses the perceptual threshold. For pure note-taking the gap is small. For drawing, sketching, or rapid mind-mapping, the gap is felt.
Scorecard
Templacity scorecard, both brands
Six dimensions that matter once the philosophy split is decided. The score is what we’d give each brand-line at its current best model, not a per-device average.
reMarkable, scored out of 10
Boox, scored out of 10
The scorecard reads the way the brands actually behave. reMarkable carries pen feel, templates, and battery; loses on apps and format range. Boox carries apps, format range, and value; loses on battery and templates. The two brands are mirror images of each other on every dimension that matters.
By use case
Pick by what you’ll actually do most
The cleanest way to choose between remarkable vs boox is to skip the brand argument and ask what the device will do most days.
Writing-first, focus matters. reMarkable Paper Pro if budget allows, reMarkable 2 (or its successor Paper Pure) if not. Boox can do this job, but it’ll fight you on focus.
Reading-first, Kindle library. Boox, every time. Specifically the Note Air 4C if you read color (manga, magazines, comics) or the Go 10.3 if mono is fine. reMarkable cannot read Kindle books at all.
Color matters and budget is tight. Boox Note Air 4C at around $500. reMarkable Paper Pro is $629 and arguably the better surface, but the price gap is real.
Pocket size, mostly reading. Boox Palma (6 inches) is the only real answer. reMarkable doesn’t make a small device.
Big surface for sketching, mind-mapping, large PDFs. Boox Note Max at 13.3 inches if you want the most paper-feel real estate. reMarkable’s largest is 11.8, which is plenty for most notebook work but not for spreadsheet-style review.
Students juggling textbooks, notes, and apps. Boox. Textbooks are usually PDFs and need annotation, plus Kindle for course readers, plus the school’s Outlook. reMarkable does the PDF and notes part well but breaks on the rest.
Business users who need to look at a phone less. reMarkable, if the workflow is mostly writing and PDFs. Boox if email and Slack on e-ink is genuinely useful.
For a deeper head-to-head, the Paper Pro vs Note Air 4C breakdown lives at Boox Note Air 4C vs reMarkable Paper Pro, and the older-device pair (reMarkable 2 vs Note Air 2) at Boox Note Air 2 vs reMarkable 2. The reMarkable hub at reMarkable and the Boox hub hold each brand’s pillar pages if you want to drill into one side.
(We’re working on a Boox bundle. It isn’t live yet; the closest fit today is the reMarkable bundle, which has a few cross-compatible PDF planners.)
Where each one breaks
Honest drawbacks on both sides
Neither brand is faultless, and the loudest complaints in their respective communities are real.
Where reMarkable breaks
- No third-party apps, ever. Kindle library is unreadable.
- Connect subscription friction. Some sync features sit behind a recurring fee.
- Steep pricing for a single-purpose device. The Paper Pro at $629 is a lot if you’re not writing daily.
- reMarkable 2 was discontinued in early 2026; the replacement Paper Pure ships mid-year. If you bought a 2 in 2025, support continues, but the device itself is end-of-line.
Where Boox breaks
- Android can feel busy on e-ink. Background apps, notifications, settings depth.
- OS update cadence is inconsistent across the lineup. Older models lag.
- The writing surface is good but not great. Pen feel falls slightly short of reMarkable on most direct comparisons.
- Color panels (Kaleido 3) have a slight shimmer that isn’t to everyone’s taste.
The honest tiebreaker: how much of your time on the device will be spent writing versus reading-and-everything-else. If it’s mostly writing, the reMarkable drawbacks rarely show up because you’re not trying to do the things it can’t do. If it’s a mix, the Boox drawbacks are easier to live with than the reMarkable wall.
Verdict
The call we’d make on remarkable vs boox
FAQ
Common questions, answered briefly
Is Boox better than reMarkable?
Can Boox read Kindle books like reMarkable can’t?
Why is Boox cheaper than reMarkable?
Does reMarkable have color now?
Is Onyx Boox the same as Boox?
If yours isn’t above, drop the question in the comments and we’ll add it.
People also ask