What counts
What a remarkable paper pro move alternative actually has to do
The reMarkable Paper Pro Move is an 8-inch portable variant of the full-size Paper Pro: color Canvas display, Marker included, reMarkable OS (locked, no apps), and a price tag around $449. The form factor is the point. It fits a coat pocket, weighs roughly 250 grams, and trades the 11.8-inch real estate for actual portability. Any honest remarkable paper pro move alternative has to land in roughly the same physical size and roughly the same writing-first job. The 11-inch Paper Pro alternatives are a different post; our reMarkable alternatives pillar covers that decision instead.
So the right remarkable paper pro move alternative depends on which Move trade-off pushed you to look for one. If the price hurts, Boox Go Color 7 is the cheapest direct e-ink color stylus tablet at the same size. If the closed OS hurts, iPad mini 7 with Apple Pencil opens a full computer. If you want color e-ink plus apps, Boox Tab Mini C delivers both. If you want reMarkable’s pen feel and quiet OS at the same price as the Move, a refurbished reMarkable 2 gives you 10.3 inches of mono Canvas for the same money. Four picks; four trade-offs; no single winner.
Compared
The four picks at a glance
| Boox Go Color 7$269 | iPad mini 7$499+ | Boox Tab Mini C$449 | rM 2 refurb$439 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screen | 7″ Kaleido 3 | 8.3″ LCD Retina | 7.8″ Kaleido 3 | 10.3″ mono Canvas |
| Color | Kaleido | LCD | Kaleido | No |
| OS / apps | Android + Play | iPadOS + App Store | Android + Play | reMarkable OS (locked) |
| Stylus included | Yes | No (+$79-$129) | Yes | Marker sold separately |
| Pen feel | Good | Good (with friction screen protector) | Good | Best in class |
| Best for | Cheapest direct match | Computer that writes | E-ink + apps + color | rM polish, mono, bigger |
None of these are strictly “better” than the Move. Each is better at one specific thing. Pick by which thing matters most.
The four picks
The four remarkable paper pro move alternative picks, in detail
1. Boox Go Color 7, the cheapest direct match
The Boox Go Color 7 is the closest like-for-like remarkable paper pro move alternative on the market today: 7-inch Kaleido 3 color e-ink, Wacom EMR pen included, Android 13 with Google Play, $269 base. It is roughly $180 cheaper than the Move and ships with a stylus that the Move does not include as standard on the bare device. Where it loses ground: Boox’s OS is busier than reMarkable’s, the pen feel is one grade below the Move’s Marker on slow strokes, and the smaller 7-inch screen is cramped for full-page PDF markup compared to the Move’s 8 inches.
The trade-off is honest: you save real money and gain real flexibility (Kindle app, Kobo app, Libby, Notion, Obsidian all install from Play) and you give up the calmest writing OS in the category. Best fit for buyers who want the Move’s color-plus-stylus combination but cannot justify the Move’s price, and who would actually use the Android app flexibility if they had it.
2. iPad mini 7 with Apple Pencil, the computer-that-writes
The iPad mini 7 sits in the same physical size class as the Move (8.3-inch LCD versus 8-inch e-ink) and crosses the category line on purpose: it gives you a tablet that also writes, instead of a writing tablet that also reads. The Apple Pencil USB-C is $79; the Pencil Pro is $129. Entry price lands around $578 with the cheaper Pencil, $628 with the Pencil Pro. That puts it $50-100 above the Move at the bundle level.
What you gain: full iPadOS, the entire App Store, the Kindle app, the Kobo app, Libby, Notability, GoodNotes, every Office app, every browser, a camera, FaceTime. What you give up: e-ink. The LCD will tire eyes faster than the Move’s Canvas Color, the battery runs hours rather than weeks, and writing on glass requires a friction screen protector to feel like paper at all. Best fit if you wanted a tablet for note-taking but also need to actually compute on the device.
(If you switch to Boox or Kobo, the same PDF planners in the bundle cross-load cleanly. Native .notebook format only loads on reMarkable devices.)
3. Boox Tab Mini C, color e-ink plus apps
The Boox Tab Mini C is the apps-plus-color alternative at roughly the Move’s price: 7.8-inch Kaleido 3 color e-ink, Android 13 with Play, stylus included, ~$449. Same Kaleido 3 panel family as the Boox Go Color 7 but in a slightly larger writing surface, with a more refined chassis and a deeper feature set than the Go line. If you want e-ink eye comfort plus the openness of Android, Tab Mini C is the device that combines both at the Move’s price.
A real remarkable paper pro move alternative has to fit the same pocket and run the same job. Bigger tablets are a different post.From this roundup
What you trade against the Move: writing OS busy-ness (Android notifications, settings depth, background apps) versus reMarkable’s silent canvas. Pen feel is one grade below the Move on quick strokes; battery is roughly half (~1 week heavy versus ~2 weeks). Best fit if you want one device that reads from any ecosystem, writes adequately, and stays in the e-ink eye-comfort category.
4. reMarkable 2 refurbished, same OS at the Move’s price
The original reMarkable 2 was discontinued from new-purchase sales in early 2026, but reMarkable’s own refurbished store still sells units at roughly $439. At the Move’s price, that buys you a 10.3-inch device (bigger than the Move’s 8 inches), the same reMarkable OS, the same Marker compatibility, and the same writing-first discipline that defines the brand. The trade-off is color (no), portability (heavier, larger), and a discontinued product line (no further OS updates beyond bug fixes).
Best fit for buyers who want reMarkable’s writing experience and OS quietness but care more about screen real estate than color. Our Kindle Scribe vs reMarkable 2 piece covers that decision against the mono Kindle Scribe; for the Move-vs-rM-2 question specifically, the rM 2 wins on size and price, the Move wins on color and portability.
Why not these
Honest non-picks: Kindle Scribe and Boox Palma 2
Two devices come up in this search that we excluded on purpose, because they are the wrong size class. The Kindle Scribe (10.2 inch) and Kindle Scribe Colorsoft (11 inch) are bigger than the Move and are a different decision; if you’ve actually decided you want a larger tablet, our reMarkable alternatives pillar covers the 11-inch field, and our Paper Pro review covers the full-size version of the same OS family. The Boox Palma 2 is a 6.13-inch phone-sized color e-ink device with no stylus support; great for one-handed reading on a commute, but not a writing tablet. Recommending it as a Move alternative would be dishonest because the use case is different.
Picking by what’ll define your week
Cheapest entry into color e-ink stylus. Boox Go Color 7. The $180 saving versus the Move buys you accessories, books, or a screen protector and you still get color plus stylus.
One device for writing and computing. iPad mini 7 with Apple Pencil. The Move is single-purpose; iPad mini is the swiss-army version.
E-ink reading from any ecosystem, occasional writing. Boox Tab Mini C. Same price as the Move, runs Kindle and Kobo apps the Move cannot.
reMarkable polish at the Move’s price, bigger screen, mono. reMarkable 2 refurbished. Same OS, two extra inches of canvas, no color.
You want the Move and are talking yourself out of it. Buy the Move. None of these picks does everything it does. The alternatives win on one axis each; the Move is the only device that combines color e-ink, Marker quality, and pocketable size in a single product.
FAQ
Common questions, answered briefly
What is the cheapest remarkable paper pro move alternative?
Is the iPad mini a real remarkable paper pro move alternative?
Should I get a refurbished reMarkable 2 instead of a new Paper Pro Move?
What about Kindle Scribe Colorsoft as a Paper Pro Move alternative?
Can the Move alternatives read Kindle books that the Move cannot?
If yours isn’t above, drop the question in the comments and we’ll add it.
People also ask
Other questions, briefly answered
If you’ve bought one of these instead of the Move, the comments are open. We rebuild this roundup on every meaningful new release or price change, so a real-world dispatch from your week is more useful to us than a guess.