TechRadar Verdict
The Dell Pro Max 18 Plus is a massive mobile workstation that has enough power to devour your professional workload as a developer, engineer, project manager, AI architect and the likes. It has spectacular ports, phenomenal power, and massive memory, offering a desktop-class machine in a machine you can put in a backpack or take to a board meeting. It’s not the easiest thing to lug around, though, for those who need bouts of semi-portability, this beast may just be what you are looking for
Check Amazon Singapore Pros- +
Positively powerful
- +
Massive 18-inch display
- +
Powerful Ports
- +
Great keyboard
- -
Shockingly expensive
- -
Very heavy
- -
Display is good, not great
- Best business laptop of 2025
- Best mobile workstations of 2025
- Best laptop for computer science students of 2025
Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you're buying the best. Find out more about how we test.
Jump to:- Price & availability
- First impressions
- Design
- In use
- Final verdict
Dell has been in the game for quite some time for the business professional, so when I got word of their newest 18-inch flagship, I knew I’d have to get my hands on it. Most of the high-powered laptops that get the flashy marketing are focused on video and photos.
But there is an entirely different type of power needed for coders, developers, engineers, QA teams, and those who have to be able to bounce in and out of all of this as a hands-on PM to make sure everything that needs to get done gets done. Not everyone lives in a wonderful world where they can have dedicated machines for everything they need to manage; some only get a single machine.
That’s where the best mobile workstations like the Dell Pro Max 18 Plus come into play. One machine with remarkable power that can dive into whatever, whenever, wherever. It’s designed very clearly for business professionals working in the engineering and development space, but could be used by people with similar needs. Just know that this is not the laptop for everyone, but it is the perfect laptop for those that need sort of desktop performance in a portable frame.
Dell Pro Max 18 Plus: Price and availability
As with most computers, the pricing varies drastically between base or entry model laptops and higher configurations. The base model of the Dell Pro Max 18 Plus starts at around $3500, and jumps up to over triple that. It's available from Dell US and Dell UK.
My model specifically is priced at $9,245, boasting an Intel Core Ultra 9 Processor, 128GB of RAM, a NVIDIA RTX Pro 5000 Blackwell with 24GB, 2TB of Storage, the 18-inch QHD+ 2560x1600 Display, and Wi-Fi 7, all with 96Whr battery life. It’s a tank.
If desired, you can upgrade even beyond what I have, with options to expand storage up to 16TB and 5G. I have pretty much every other feature in this setup, though.
Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletterContact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.
Dell Pro Max 18 Plus: Unboxing and First Impressions
No matter how you slice it, 18 inches in a laptop is not a small machine. With most portable laptops measuring around 13 inches and the standard “large laptop” at 16 inches, this machine feels massive even next to my fleet of other workstations I have in for review.
The laptop, aside from its monstrous proportions, has a comfortable keyboard, a full-size numpad, a fingerprint reader, a robust port selection, and a full and helpful function row. The touchpad is responsive and easy to use, and the screen is sharp enough for all of the work I do.
The port layout is great as well. The Thunderbolt 5 ports are on the left, along with the RJ45, the HDMI, the Smart Card, and the SD Card slot. On the right, there is a Kensington Lock (not shocking with how valuable this laptop can be, not only in retail price but value of content being created and managed on the device), both USB-A’s, the other Thunderbolt Port and the Headphone Jack.
Personally, I really like how Dell doesn’t put any of their ports on the back of their machines, even their workstations. Making it easy to grab and go whenever needed.
The last thing I’ll mention is that it’s nice to see a physical camera shutter, which is always a mark of the best business laptops. In a world where I am getting increasingly paranoid, it’s nice to have a physical way to block that eye staring at me at all times.
All in all, the aesthetic is clean, professional, and business first. It’s a powerhouse but it looks like any other laptop at a quick glance. No RGB, no flashy or gaudy badging, no loud branding. Just a sleek machine that means business, and one you won’t be ashamed to bring to the board meeting.
Dell Pro Max 18 Plus: Design & Build Quality
The 18-inch display is the first thing that needs to be discussed with the Pro Max 18 Plus. It’s 18 inches for crying out loud. That’s not just a version number, that’s how big this thing is. It’s so big that it barely fits in my Nomatic Backpack. Meaning, that you’ll have to keep things like that in mind, most bags are designed to fit 16-inch laptops, not 18-inches.
However, with that added screen real estate, the odds of needing a portable monitor to bring with you probably drops, depending on what you do of course. Granted, you may still have a docking station at your main workstation with a monitor, but working on the go gets a lot easier with a screen like this always with you.
While this screen is good, even really good, it’s not great for photo editing or video editing. But, it’s not supposed to be. So, instead of Dell wasting engineering dollars and materials on making a nice screen for something this machine will most likely not be used for, they used those funds for making a more powerful, efficient, and power-hungry machine.
Perhaps that’s where they got the audacity to add not just one but two Thunderbolt 5 ports. And for that, I thank Dell. This display is more than enough for coding, project management, writing, database management, development, and related tasks. It’s spectacular for multitasking, and it’s snappy, really snappy.
Dell Pro Max 18 Plus: In use
CPU: Intel Core Ultra 9 285HXGPU: NVIDIA RTX Pro 5000 Blackwell w/24GBRAM: 128GBDisplay: 18" QHD+ LCDResolution: 2560x1600Brightness: 500 nits
The Dell Pro Max 18 Plus is not a laptop you casually use. It’s not one you “toss” in your bag or gingerly bring with you around the house. You can, but just as people are complaining that the 12.9-inch iPad, one of the thinnest technological advances in our computing history, is too large, cumbersome, and not portable enough, there is no way this computer will be considered ultra-portable. Portable, yes. But ultra portable or pleasant to carry around all day? Absolutely not. This is the kind of machine you bring to a place, and park it.
In real-world use, running large repos on GitHub, pulling up records in DBeaver, running projects in VS Code, working in Notion, responding to Slack, having an embarrassing amount of Chrome Tabs, PM’ing in Jira, Asana, Basecamp, and Trello, and taking virtual meetings all in sequence have not even made the fans spin up.
This machine is a beast. An absolute powerhouse. It’s got enough headroom that I don’t even think or wait for things to load anymore.
In my day-to-day, I wear many hats at the same time. In a given hour, I am working alongside four companies at a high level. I could be in a virtual meeting for one company, managing their data, responding to messages from a second, and physically talking to a third. All while loading data or a project for a fourth.
The Dell Pro 18 Plus is the kind of machine that can not only take on a massive project but also several at a time if needed. Again, I wouldn’t pick this as my laptop to carry around one-handed while walking between in-person meetings, but having a machine this powerful that could be brought out if needed is still mind-boggling to me sometimes.
Dell Pro Max 18 Plus: Final verdict
If you are the kind of person who needs a machine that can handle whatever codebase you’re working in, and you want it to be semi-portable, this is your machine. If you want a laptop that can tackle whatever project you throw at it, no matter how many projects at a time, this is your laptop.
If you are a graphics person, a video editor, a photo editor, or a 3D modeler, this machine could do it, but there are probably better options. If you are a commuter, I can say right now this machine is perhaps not one you want to tote around more than necessary, for many reasons.
But if you want high-powered desktop-level power in a laptop, then step right up and swipe that card.
Image 1 of 11
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future )
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future )
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future )
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future )
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future )
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future )
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future )
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future )
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future )
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future )
(Image credit: Collin Probst // Future )For more models, we've tested the best Dell laptops.
Dell Pro Max 18 Plus: Price Comparison
Collin ProbstSocial Links NavigationFormer TechRadar Pro B2B Hardware Editor, Collin has been in journalism for years, with experience in small and large markets, including Gearadical, DailyBeast, FutureNet, and more.
Show More CommentsYou must confirm your public display name before commenting
Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.
Logout Back To Top Read more
HP ZBook X G1i mobile workstation review
HP ZBook Ultra G1a 14 mobile workstation review
HP EliteBook X G1a AI 14 business laptop review
Dell 16 Plus review
Dell Tower Plus (EBT2250) review: this PC does it all
Alldocube IWork GT Ultra review
Latest in Pro
No wonder there's a bubble - study claims nearly all of the world’s data centers are built in the wrong climate
WhatsApp user warning - hackers are hijacking accounts without any need to crack the authentication, so be on your guard
AI designed this Linux computer with 843 parts and dual-PCBs in just a week - and it even booted the first time
"Tech companies have paid lip service" - US government is asking AI giants why data centers are leading to rising bills
No storefront needed — get paid via DMs and QR codes with Squarespace’s new tool
React2Shell exploitation continues to escalate, posing 'significant risk'
Latest in Reviews
This Narwal robot vacuum has an impressive feature list, but just doesn't do as it's told
SharpSpring CRM review 2026
Chuwi CoreBook X 7430U laptop review
Salesmate CRM review 2026
Meze Audio 99 Classics 2nd Gen review: walnut-cupped wired headphone beauties to level up the OG model
HoneyBook CRM review 2026
LATEST ARTICLES- 1How to add special effects and transitions to videos using Adobe Firefly
- 2Desktop power in a semi portable frame? I tested the Dell Pro Max 18 Plus and it's a tank you can take to a coffee shop
- 3No wonder there's a bubble - study claims nearly all of the world’s data centers are built in the wrong climate
- 4AI designed this Linux computer with 843 parts and dual-PCBs in just a week - and it even booted the first time
- 5WhatsApp user warning - hackers are hijacking accounts without any need to crack the authentication, so be on your guard