Last year, Lenovo had a new addition to the ThinkPad series, Lenovo’s brand for commercial customers: the ThinkPad T1g, a powerful premium multimedia laptop and cousin to the Lenovo ThinkPad P1. The spiritual successor of the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Extreme featured the very same design as the ThinkPad P1 Gen 8, but uses Nvidia GeForce RTX 5000 GPUs instead of the professional Nvidia RTX Pro Blackwell series.
Officially launched at IFA 2025, the ThinkPad T1g Gen 8 received high grades in our testing. Just six months later, however, its time in the limelight is already over again, as Lenovo has quietly revealed its successor via its PSREF site: The Lenovo ThinkPad T1g Gen 9.Â
Despite being a whole new generation, the Lenovo ThinkPad T1g Gen 9 is a small update, paralleling the ThinkPad P1 Gen 9 that was announced in March 2026 as well. Lenovo keeps the same design, with a large haptic touchpad, black aluminum chassis and wide port selection.
New this year: Intel Panther Lake CPUs, with the Intel Core Ultra 9 386H as the top option. Unlike the ThinkPad P1 Gen 9, the T1g Gen 9 will not be available without a dGPU, so the Core Ultra X9 option is not there. Additionally, Lenovo is increasing the maximum RAM capacity of the LPCAMM2 memory to 96 GB (64 GB on the T1g Gen 8), and there is a new 5G option that the predecessor was missing completely. Plus, the SSDs are finally connected via PCIe 5.0 – the older model was limited to PCIe 4.0.
Of course, the headline feature of the ThinkPad T1g Gen 9 is the new version of the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070, which gets a very welcome upgrade from eight to twelve gigabyte of VRAM. The new GPU was recently spotted in the spec sheets of other new Lenovo laptops as well.
With the Lenovo ThinkPad T1g Gen 9 already listed at the PSREF database, the release can only be a matter of time. However, since no actual configurations are listed yet in the PSREF, it will probably still take some time.
Benjamin Herzig – Managing Editor – 1459 articles published on Notebookcheck since 2016
I was an ardent reader of Notebookcheck’s laptop reviews even back in school. After writing reviews as a hobby, I then joined Notebookcheck in 2016 and have worked on device reviews and news articles ever since then. My personal interest lies more with laptops than smartphones, with business laptops being the most interesting category for me. Technology should make our lives and work easier and good laptops are an essential tool for that to happen. This is why laptop reviews are not just my work but are also my passion.