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Fully rugged, semi-rugged, or "business rugged" laptops...what's the difference? Plenty. But whatever the degree of durability, the demand for laptops that can survive harsh environments and unforgiving treatment is sizable. These laptops are essential for first responders, military personnel, and others in the field. PCMag has decades of experience testing laptops, and our hands-on approach is crucial for evaluating the toughest models. We assess performance, battery life, and unique rugged features, such as sunlight readability, vehicle-mount options, touch input with gloved hands, and waterproof ratings. Our current recommendation for the best fully rugged laptop is the Panasonic Toughbook 40 Mk2, a tank of a notebook that can practically work through a hurricane. Read on for more tested, vetted laptop recommendations for different scenarios, toughness needs, and budgets, as well as deep buying advice and a handy spec comparison.
Our Top Tested Picks
Panasonic Toughbook 40 Mk2
Panasonic Toughbook 55 Mk3
Dell Latitude 7230 Rugged Extreme Tablet
Best Rugged Laptop for Heavy-Duty Field Use
Panasonic Toughbook 40 Mk2
- Virtually indestructible
- Epic battery life
- Many modular and expansion options
- Both high-noon and night-vision screen modes
- Bulky and heavy
- Hella expensive
- Slightly tricky touchpad
First responders, field workers, and armed forces members will find no better computing companion than Panasonic's hefty, highly configurable, and hard-as-nails Toughbook 40 Mk2 rugged laptop.
Best Compact Rugged Laptop
Getac B360 G2
- Laughs at abuse
- Light and compact
- Extra-bright 1080p touch screen
- Broad array of ports and optional 5G
- Lacks swappable component bays of heavier rivals
- Dim keyboard backlighting
- Expensive
The 13.3-inch Getac B360 G2 isn't as versatile or configurable as other impact-resistant and weatherproof laptops, but it's lighter and a smart choice to grab if you're heading into harm's way.
Best Large-Screen Rugged Laptop
Getac X600
- Rugged to the max
- Powerful CPU/GPU combo
- Big, bright display
- Dual hot-swappable batteries
- Plenty of connectivity
- Very, very expensive and heavy
- Screen has poor color performance
- Mushy keyboard and undersize touchpad
The Getac X600 laptop offers a unique combination of a large display and powerful workstation-grade components in an almost indestructible enclosure—for a staggeringly high price.
Best Rugged Laptop for Customization Options
Panasonic Toughbook 55 Mk3
- Sunlight-viewable touch screen
- Stellar battery life with second battery
- Three modular bays
- Comfortable keyboard
- Connectivity galore
- Expensive
- Small touchpad
Panasonic’s Toughbook 55 presents a semi-rugged laptop with excellent connectivity, lots of customization, a comfortable keyboard, and a sunlight-ready touch screen that can last nearly 24 hours.
Best Rugged Tablet
Durabook R11
- Fully rugged yet thin and light
- Impressive 12th Gen Intel CPU performance
- Versatile and bright touch screen
- Disappointing battery life (without optional accessory)
- No stylus storage area
- Expensive
The Durabook R11 is the thinnest and lightest fully rugged tablet we’ve reviewed, but its base model's short battery life will leave workers in the field wanting more.
Best Rugged Tablet for Long Battery Life
Dell Latitude 7230 Rugged Extreme Tablet
- Rugged design can survive almost anything
- Sunlight-ready touch screen works with gloved hands and included pen
- Plenty of features, including 4G/5G mobile data
- Optional handle for grab-and-go use
- Dual hot-swappable batteries with long battery life, too
- Heavy and chunky
- Middling performance
- Keyboard not included
It's not the best performer, but Dell's Latitude 7230 Rugged Extreme Tablet does the job anywhere—whether down a mineshaft, on a construction site, or at the scene of an accident. You'll likely be hard-pressed to find an environment this slate can't survive.
Best Compact Semi-Rugged Laptop
Getac S410 G5
- Laughs at rough treatment and bad weather
- Epic battery life
- Super-bright screen
- High-res webcam
- Plenty of ports and configuration options
- Deeply expensive
- Heavy
- Rigid, dimly backlit keyboard
- Not as drop- and- waterproof as fully rugged machines
The latest refresh of Getac's 14-inch semi-rugged laptop, the S410, is a pricey but industrial-strength partner for first responders and factory workers.
Best Large-Screen Semi-Rugged Laptop
Durabook S15
- Sunlight-legible screen
- Plenty of connectivity
- Supports three storage drives
- Integrated carry handle
- Three-year warranty
- So-so battery life
- Screen lacks color
- Noticeable cooling fan noise
Durabook’s S15 rugged laptop is far more durable than the average notebook and provides almost everything workers need in the field, including a screen that's legible in direct sunlight.
For users who need serious computing power in hostile environments, there's no substitute for a laptop that can laugh off mistreatment that would destroy an ordinary machine. Let's run through the key things to look for as you shop. Fasten your seat belts. It's going to be a bumpy ride.
MIL-STD 810G and 810H: What Do They Mean?
Before we get into brawny machines that can survive six-foot drops and jets of water, we must acknowledge that not all mainstream notebooks are frail and fragile. Many Lenovo ThinkPads, HP EliteBooks, and other business systems are reasonably resistant to bumps and bruises, though they can't survive high dives or liquids in excess of minor keyboard spills. Even some Chromebooks carry the same designation as these hardy travelers—MIL-STD 810G, which indicates compliance with a series of tests required for the US Department of Defense to consider using a piece of equipment in a military setting. More recent models often meet the refreshed MIL-STD 810H spec.
The MIL-STD 810 standard spans over 800 pages and nearly 30 laboratory test methods for challenges ranging from weather (high and low temperatures, rain, and humidity) to physical forces (acceleration, vibration, and shock). Few computer vendors push their products over every hurdle that the standard posits, including such tortures as gunfire-recoil shock, icing or freezing rain, whether a laptop might spark an explosion in flammable gas atmospheres, and—wait for it—resistance to fungus. Rather, the manufacturer may note that the system has passed 10 or 12 MIL-STD tests.
The trouble with a MIL-STD 810G or 810H sticker on a laptop's box or vendor's website is that it doesn't tell you enough. Because no independent agency certifies MIL-STD compliance, it's up to you to look for documentation or details of which tests a product passed, who conducted the tests—the manufacturer or an outside lab—and how the tests were performed. For example, since users are prone to drop laptops, certification for shock is a popular claim. But there's no rule about what height to drop a device from.
Does this make the certification useless? Not at all. Think of it as a checklist item or the first thing to look for rather than a guarantee of bulletproof reliability, and be aware that you need to read the fine print.
Braving the Elements: What Do IP Ratings Mean?
A more stringent abbreviation seen on seriously sturdy laptops is a code such as "IP65." The IP stands for "ingress protection"—keeping solids or liquids out of the machine's vulnerable innards. This rating is measured numerically rather than by general terms such as "dustproof" or "water-resistant."
You can read our primer on IP and MIL-STD ratings for full details, but here's IP in a nutshell. The first digit after the letters "IP" denotes safety against solids on a scale of 0 to 6. The number 2 means you can't stick your fingers into the device. The number 4 means the system is proof against objects larger than 1mm, such as most wires; 5 means some, and 6 means complete protection against dust and sand.
The second digit after IP measures protection against liquids, this time on a scale of 0 to 9. A device rated 1 can resist a few vertical drips; 4 means splashing water, 5 means jets of water, and 7 and 8 refer to immersion in less than one meter and one to three meters of water, respectively. Unlike some smartphones, no laptop we know of is safe to submerge wholly, so don't expect to see a liquid rating higher than 5.
A sure sign that a manufacturer is serious about an IP rating is sealed ports—doors that cover connectors such as USB ports and HDMI video outputs. The higher the IP rating, the better it is at sealing out water and dust, so you'll see some laptops with simple port covers and others with specialty seals to protect the openings further.
What Are Rugged Laptops Made Of?
Other things to look for in a rugged laptop start at first sight—its outer case or chassis. Obviously, the thin plastic of many consumer models turns to shrapnel when faced with what rugged PCs go through, though it's amazing what a little reinforcement can do. Semi-rugged laptops may stick to plastic but are reinforced with tougher composite materials. Fully rugged laptops and tablets usually opt for metal.
Common chassis materials include magnesium or magnesium-aluminum alloys, with rubber or rubberized bumpers on a laptop's corners as a popular protective measure against drops. However, heftier metals like steel may still be used for reinforcement, usually as a chassis frame that acts like a roll cage for internal components.
We've already discussed doors that cover ports, but as with any laptop, you should consider which ports you need. Machines built for duty on factory floors are among the last that still have RS-232 serial ports, often used for connection to legacy data-collection equipment. SmartCard readers are common since rugged machines are usually deployed in environments where machine access needs to be controlled. Others feature modular or swappable bays for storage drives or batteries or slots for mobile-broadband SIM cards so you can go online when out in the field, away from Wi-Fi hotspots. (There's a whole nationwide network, FirstNet, reserved for first responders.)
While you can't see them easily, many rugged laptops have specially shock-mounted components. Jolt-resistant solid-state drives (SSDs) replaced relatively delicate spinning hard drives, which was a boon for the category, but some vendors go beyond that—we've even seen a heated SSD that keeps working in frigid temperatures.
Real Hands-On Issues: Factoring in Gloves and Rain
Virtually all laptop screens are good enough for work in your average office. Take one outside, however, and it's a whole different story.
Looking at a typical display panel in direct sunlight can render it invisible, without enough contrast to make out more than the palest ghost of an image. That's why many rugged laptops boast extra-bright displays, with 1,000 or more nits of brightness compared with the 300 or 400 of most indoors-optimized systems.
You'll also find reinforced glass to combat cracking or shattering, though you almost certainly won't find the 4K (3,840-by-2,160-pixel) resolution of conventional flagship laptops—rugged screens tend to peak at full HD or 1080p (1,920 by 1,080 pixels), with a few settling for even lower, older resolutions such as 1,024 by 768.
On these laptops, touch screens are a special case. Most of today's touch-screen notebooks use capacitive technology, in which a near-transparent digitizing layer over the panel detects your finger via the electrical conductivity of your skin. Fine, but what if you're wearing gloves? Oops—capacitive tech doesn't work. The solution is a resistive touch-screen design, in which—with a slightly harder push from you—the top layer flexes to close a circuit with another layer beneath it.
The same goes for the touchpads located in laptops' palm rests. Capacitive pads are useless if you're wearing gloves or if it's raining, whereas a two-layer resistive touchpad can track in wet or adverse conditions. On the negative side, you may discover that a resistive pad requires so much pressure that it feels clumsy when used indoors with dry, bare fingers.
Tablet-based designs take this even further with glove-friendly touch screens, stylus input, and physical buttons, ideal for use in cold or wet weather where the user might be wearing gloves.
We mentioned that many business systems have spill-resistant keyboards and drainage holes in their bottoms to save your bacon if you spill a few ounces of water, so it's no surprise that rugged keyboards are designed not to drown with even greater amounts. Depending on the weather where you work, some manufacturers offer a choice of keyboards built for wet or wetter conditions, the latter with rubberized or coated keys that sacrifice a little typing feel to provide extra protection.
Ready to Buy the Right Rugged Laptop for You?
Every rugged laptop has passed MIL-STD tests, and at the minimum, they're the next best thing to bulletproof. We'll refresh this guide as we review additional true-rugged systems. Meanwhile, check below for a detailed spec breakout of our suggested models above. Thanks for reading, and be careful out there.