Farewell Pro Max Premium: Dell reverses rebranding move to bring back iconic XPS laptops
Dell was humble enough to think its 30+ years of XPS branding had no staying power, but its loyal users proved Dell wrong.
By Liu Hongzuo -
Last year, Dell’s big CES announcement was a major rebrand that re-categorised its (formerly) numerous product lines.
Gone were the household names like Latitude, Precision, XPS, or Inspiron from Dell, as the US company consolidated all of them into a simplified buzzword tier list.
For about a year, your Dell laptop started from its Base model, followed by Dell Plus, Premium, and Pro Max, which are further combined depending on your notebook needs.
Dell XPS, the comeback kid
As it turns out, Pro-Max-Premiumtising did not work as well as Dell had hoped. For CES 2026, Dell announced it will reverse its rebranding decision and reintroduce one of its most iconic consumer laptop series, the XPS.
The new categorisation of Dell laptops now.
Specifically, Dell XPS laptops are returning to serve the high-end “prosumer” category. According to Dell, XPS has become too iconic a brand name across its lineup, ingraining itself with both non-Dell and Dell laptop fans and even affecting users’ retail and online search behaviour.
It’s not hard to see why, given that XPS has been a household name since 1993 and was created to break into the high-end consumer market.
The rebranding wasn’t entirely an own goal: the other names (Base, Plus, Pro, Pro Max) helped reduce the number of Dell laptop brands, and they will continue to serve all other Dell users in a slightly different format (see table image above). Folks can choose an entry-level or mid-range Dell notebook for school or casual use, while the corporate-forward Pro variant is for non-XPS users.
The new Dell XPS, redesigned.
As if aware of its own branding stumble, the reintroduced laptops feature a prominent Sans-serif XPS logo on the case, juxtaposed with an otherwise sleek ultraportable form factor and look.
XPS 14 and XPS 16
Dell XPS 14 (left) and XPS 16 (right).
The resurrected Dell XPS will come in two main configurations: XPS 14 and XPS 16. Both numbers refer to screen sizes in inches, and the device features a redesigned unibody style.
Dell XPS being the workhorse it was always meant to be, with the name it was always meant to have.
Dell added that its 14-inch XPS has a smaller physical footprint than a 13-inch MacBook Air despite having more display real estate. This is on top of the 2026 XPS laptops offering 1-120Hz variable refresh rates, with a choice between 2K LCD and Tandem OLED panels.
OLED on an XPS?
Inside, these XPS laptops feature the latest Intel Core Ultra Series 3 processors, plus onboard Intel Arc graphics with 12 Xe cores, delivering up to 57% (XPS 14) and 78% (XPS 16) faster AI performance than before.
The re-engineered thermals for cooler performance.
To ensure good thermals, Dell also equipped the XPS with its largest-ever fans for airflow, and the notebooks are only 14.6mm thin despite packing all that power and hardware (yes, including an 8MP, 4K-resolution webcam).
Also, Dell claimed the new notebooks have insanely long battery lives, with the XPS 14 clocking 27 hours and XPS 16 going up to 40+ hours of local/offline video playback.
A thinness at just 14.6mm for both Dell XPS models.
The XPS 14 starts at S$1,649.99 (~S$2,123.46) while the XPS 16 starts at US$1,849.99 (~S$2,380.85). We will update with local pricing and availability when Dell brings them to Singapore.
XPS 13, its thinnest yet
Dell XPS 13, which wasn’t ready for close-up photos yet.
Arriving slightly later than the larger versions is Dell’s most affordable and compact variant, the XPS 13.
Dell did not share very much about XPS 13, other than it being even thinner than its other two variants with just 13mm height, and that it’s the budget-friendly alternative to an otherwise premium XPS lineup.
The XPS 13 will be available “later this year”. More to follow after CES 2026.