What we were weighting.
Five criteria, weighted in this order. A buying guide that hides its criteria is guessing.
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01
Writing feel
Latency, friction, palm rejection, rest-angle. Sub-25ms is the threshold most people describe as feeling like paper.
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02
Reading comfort
Front-light, panel resolution, weight in hand. Daylight reading is solved on every device; evening reading separates them.
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03
Total cost over three years
Sticker price plus subscriptions plus the stylus most people end up upgrading. Subscription compounding matters.
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04
Software discipline
Locked, opinionated software is a feature. Open Android can be a feature too if you tinker; it can be a distraction otherwise.
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05
Battery in real days
Days of mixed reading and writing, not marketing hours. Under five days in our testing cost points.
Five e-ink tablets we'd buy in 2026.
Best-fit-first. Each card has the case for and against in plain language.
reMarkable Paper Pro
The reMarkable’s writing engine in colour, on a larger panel. The latency is unchanged from the reMarkable 2 (~21ms), the colour adds genuine utility for PDF annotation, and the build is the most refined in the category.
- Lowest latency in class.
- Colour panel useful for highlights and annotations.
- PDF-native export keeps notes portable.
- Out-the-door price north of $700 with Marker Plus.
- reMarkable Connect compounds.
- No front-light without external lighting.
Kindle Scribe
If reading is the primary job and writing is the bonus, the Scribe is the cheapest path into e-ink writing. The library reach is the deciding factor for anyone already inside the Kindle ecosystem.
- Native Kindle library.
- Warm front-light for evening reading.
- No subscription required.
- Notebook layer narrower than reMarkable.
- Inside Amazon’s ecosystem.
- Side-loading EPUBs adds friction.
Boox Go 10.3
Eighty per cent of the reMarkable 2 feel for half the price. The included stylus is the weak point; budget $30 for an EMR replacement and the device punches above its weight.
- Cheapest serious e-ink writer in 2026.
- Android-based, runs Kindle/Notion apps.
- Solid PDF reader.
- Included pen is rough.
- Latency 30-35ms vs reMarkable’s 21ms.
- Build is plastic where competitors use aluminium.
Boox Note Air 4 C
Colour e-ink, full Android. Read your Kindle library natively, write with any app, sync to any cloud. The trade is more friction and less discipline than the reMarkable.
- Colour panel + Kindle app native.
- Open Android software.
- Multiple cloud sync options.
- Writing feel less polished.
- Settings menus tempt you to fiddle.
- Premium pricing for Boox.
reMarkable Paper Pro Move
The Paper Pro writing engine in a 7.3-inch pocket-friendly form. The screen is small for reading but the writing feel is identical to the full Paper Pro at a meaningfully lower price.
- Same latency as full Paper Pro.
- Pocket-friendly form factor.
- Colour panel for highlights.
- 7.3 inches is tight for PDF reading.
- Connect subscription compounds.
- Limited folio options.
The field, in five numbers.
Devices that didn't make the list.
Tested but cut, and the honest reason why.
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Supernote A5 X2
$459 - Lovely writing experience, smaller panel and weaker resolution per dollar than the alternatives at this price. Cut on criteria 2 and 3.
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Onyx Boox Tab Ultra C
$599 - Strong colour panel but 10-inch class with iPad-like form. Felt closer to a tablet trying to be e-ink than e-ink that happens to be coloured.
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Kindle Colorsoft (no stylus)
$279 - Reading-only Kindle. Out of category for a writing device buying guide; covered separately in our Scribe vs Colorsoft post.
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iPad with Paperlike film
$479+ - Not e-ink. Mentioned because many readers compare anyway. Wins on software, loses on focus, eye comfort, and battery.