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The best Chromebooks for kids in 2023

These cloud-based laptops are lightweight, affordable, and have great safety features.
By Leah Stodart  on 
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Overview

Best overall choice

HP Chromebook x360 13b

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Best budget Chromebook for kids

Dell Chromebook 3100

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Best portable Chromebook for kids

Lenovo Chromebook Duet 3

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Best premium Chromebook for kids

Google Pixelbook Go

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Best gaming Chromebook for kids

Acer Chromebook 516 GE

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There's more to consider than just what supplies to buy this year (though we'll help with that too.)


Table of Contents

Knowing what the best Chromebooks for kids are is important before you dive into a purchase. With so many options out there, it can be confusing to know where to begin when first checking out ChromeOS. Typically smaller and lighter than traditional laptops, they often hold up better against drops or spills and are easier for kids to carry. With better durability and battery life, you won't have to worry about so much maintenance either.

While most Chromebooks don't offer fast processors, 4K screens, or other high-end specs, they still tend to provide convenient advantages such as a touchscreen or backlit keyboard so your child can get plenty done with their alternate laptop.

But there's a more serious facet to Chromebooks that makes them appealing to cautious parents: They're some of the most secure devices on the market. On top of the usual "stranger danger" apprehension, parents are likely concerned about their family's data getting into the wrong hands.

But actually, parent or not, every paranoid internet user should have a Chromebook. Don't @ us.

The main reason is that Chromebooks are cloud-based. Almost anything you do is automatically backed up on Google Drive, so you won't lose all of your files if your Chromebook breaks — or if your kid forgets to save a school paper. Updates are automatic as well.

Google's ChromeOS is a hardcore bodyguard in itself. Every web page or Chrome app runs its own sandbox, essentially ensuring that other parts of the computer won't be compromised even if that page gets hacked or "infected." However, a Chromebook probably won't get a virus: Most malware is designed for Windows or Mac and ignore Google's OS and Android apps on the service (for now). If something sketchy were to happen, the threat can be wiped out by closing the page or reverting to factory settings. These security features are a huge part of why nearly three out of every five machines purchased by K-12 schools in 2018 were Chromebooks.

Monitoring kids' usage on the cloud can't be done with downloadable parental control software. The easiest way to set limits is to take advantage of your router's parental control features or invest in a filter for your home network, like Circle with Disney. These let you manage things like screen time and blocked sites on every device connected to your home WiFi. Upon setup, it's suggested that parents be the first person to create an account. The first account to log in is seen as the "owner" of the Chromebook, and the owner is who gets to control the settings on other accounts.

Choosing the right Chromebook for your kid

Some Chromebooks are lightweight and some are bricks. Younger kids will probably do better with smaller, compact laptops with military-grade durability that can handle a drop from the table without any risk of damage to the screen.

Storage isn't a huge deal when most everything is stored in the cloud. (Google Drive comes with 15GB for free.) However, if your kid will be downloading something like textbooks, you might consider a Chromebook with more storage or with an SD card slot to expand storage. 32GB to 64GB is a good place to start, and solid-state drive storage (SSD) will be faster than embedded Multi-Media Card (eMMC) flash storage.

Power-wise, most entry-level Chromebooks pack 4GB of RAM (which determines how many tasks a machine can handle at once) and budget processors; the Intel Celeron N series makes frequent appearances in this category. If your kid does a lot of multitasking or plans on playing games on their Chromebook, look into models with more RAM and zippier Intel Core CPUs.

Kids who use Microsoft Office for schoolwork will need a Chromebook that can run Android apps from the Google Play Store. Most are Android-compatible, but some fumble with non-Chrome apps.

With extensive options out there, we've picked out the best Chromebooks for kids in 2023 (including a Dell Chromebook, an Acer Chromebook, a Lenovo Chromebook, and an HP Chromebook), zeroing in on something for every budget and need.

Our Pick

The thin, sleek HP Chromebook x360 13b from late 2022 is a 13-inch convertible laptop that makes a worthy kid-friendly alternative to the family desktop, with specs that are useful for both education and entertainment (plus a still-reasonable sub-$500 price). It features a 360-degree hinge that turns it into a tablet with a flip, and it runs on a fanless and quiet MediaTek Kompanio 1200 processor. Its body is made of plastic (the recycled ocean-bound variety, at least), but its metal lid ensures it's durable enough to survive daily wear and tear. A virtually unheard-of 16-hour battery life and 128GB of peppy SSD storage round out its highlights reel.

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the Dell Chromebook 3100 against a gray background

Dell Chromebook 3100

Best budget Chromebook for kids

Handing a device to a kid is like watching an accident flash before your eyes. Designed to withstand the rigors of daily life in the classroom, at home, and everywhere in between, the 11.6-inch Dell Chromebook 3100 is a budget-friendly pick for parents who value durability and affordability overall. With an entry-level Intel Celeron N4500 processor, 4GB of RAM, and 32GB of eMMC storage, it's best suited for basic tasks like word processing and web browsing. But what it lacks in flashy specs and curb appeal, it makes up for with shock-absorbent rubber bumpers and a spill-resistant keyboard; it can handle 30-inch drops and up to 12 ounces of liquid, no problem.

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the Lenovo Chromebook Duet 3 against a gray background

Lenovo Chromebook Duet 3

Best portable Chromebook for kids

The Lenovo Chromebook Duet 3 is a remarkably lightweight 2-in-1 device with a decent Qualcomm Snapdragon 7c Gen 2 processor, a case with a convenient built-in kickstand, and a waterproof, detachable keyboard that's perfect for small hands. Many tablet-laptop hybrids don't come with any such accessories — see the Microsoft Surface Go 3 and its separate Type Cover — making the Chromebook Duet a stellar value. It also has 128GB of storage, which is nice even though it's the pokier eMMC variety. Its surprisingly vivid 11-inch touchscreen display is compatible with USI 2.0 styluses for drawing and doodling, but you will have to buy one of those separately. 

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the Google Pixelbook Go against a gray background

Google Pixelbook Go

Best premium Chromebook for kids

The world has its share of Chromebook non-believers. The sluggish plastic ones aren't changing any minds, but Google's Pixelbook Go just might. This 13.3-inch Chromebook has a magnesium alloy body with a ribbed bottom for good grip, and its eighth-gen Intel Core m3 processor with 8GB of RAM offers significantly more oomph than the competition — it's easily beastly enough for school projects and running multiple energy-sucking apps at once. (Mom and Dad should be able to get some good use out of it, too.) It also comes with 64GB of SSD storage, which is a welcome upgrade from most kid-friendly Chromebooks' sluggish eMMC flash storage.

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an Acer Chromebook 516 GE against a gray background

Acer Chromebook 516 GE

Best gaming Chromebook for kids

"Gaming Chromebook" seems like an oxymoron, but the 2022 Acer Chromebook 516 GE ("Gaming Edition") is uniquely suited for the role thanks to strong specs like an Intel Core i5 CPU, Intel Iris Xe graphics, a whopping 256GB of SSD storage, and a 16-inch 120Hz display. It even comes equipped with a keyboard that lights up in rainbow hues. It's definitely overkill for non-gamers — and probably too heavy to bring everywhere, at nearly 4 pounds. Nine hours of battery life is less than ideal, too. But it's perfectly capable of handling your kiddo's Fortnite, Minecraft, Roblox, and Rocket League rotation via NVIDIA GeForce Now or Xbox Game Pass. (No need to buy each title separately.)

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Leah Stodart
Leah Stodart
Senior Shopping Reporter

Leah Stodart is a Philadelphia-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable where she covers essential home tech like vacuums and TVs as well as sustainable swaps and travel. Her ever-growing experience in these categories comes in clutch when making recommendations on how to spend your money during shopping holidays like Black Friday, which Leah has been covering for Mashable since 2017.

The robot vacuum beat in particular has cemented itself as Leah's main ~thing~ across the past few years. Since 2019, her expertise has been perpetually bolstered by the meticulous eye she keeps on robot vacuum deals and new releases, but more importantly, her hands-on experience with more than 25 robot vacuums tested in her own home. (This number has probably gone up by the time you're reading this.) That at-home testing is standardized through Mashable's robot testing guide — a granular scoring rubric for assessing all aspects of owning and using a robot vacuum on the daily — that Leah created herself.

Leah graduated from Penn State University in 2016 with dual degrees in Sociology and Media Studies. When she's not writing about shopping (or shopping online for herself), she's almost definitely watching a horror movie, "RuPaul's Drag Race," or "The Office." You can follow her on X at @notleah or email her at [email protected].

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