LEEDOW ANL5-5095 Review — Remarkable Value for a Budget Laptop in 2026
This LEEDOW ANL5-5095 review covers a 15.6-inch Windows laptop aimed at budget buyers who do not want to compromise on memory. At a price point where 4GB or 8GB RAM is still common, the ANL5-5095 ships with 16GB of LPDDR4 RAM — a genuine differentiator in this tier. Paired with a 512GB SSD, a Full HD IPS display, and touch ID fingerprint unlock, the machine presents a strong specification on paper for everyday home and study use.
The processor is an Intel Celeron N5095, a quad-core Jasper Lake chip with a 15W TDP — a meaningful step up from the lower-wattage dual-core Celeron parts that populate many laptops at similar prices. This review covers what that combination delivers in practice, where the limits fall, and who this machine is genuinely suited to in 2026.
Specifications
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| CPU | Intel Celeron N5095 (Jasper Lake, 4 cores/4 threads, 2.0GHz base / 2.9GHz burst) |
| RAM | 16GB LPDDR4 (soldered) |
| Storage | 512GB SSD (M.2 2280 SATA; expandable via TF card slot) |
| Display | 15.6″ Full HD 1920×1080 IPS |
| GPU | Intel UHD Graphics Jasper Lake (16 EUs, up to 750MHz) |
| Connectivity | Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac), Bluetooth 4.2 |
| Ports | USB 3.0, HDMI, audio jack |
| Security | Touch ID fingerprint unlock |
| Battery | 5,000mAh |
| Weight | 1.5kg |
| Dimensions | 35.7 × 22.5 × 2cm |
| OS | Windows 11 |
If you want to check current availability and pricing, the LEEDOW ANL5-5095 is available on Amazon UK — see the current price here.
Performance — Understanding the N5095
The Intel Celeron N5095 is a quad-core processor from Intel’s Jasper Lake generation, released in early 2021. Its 15W TDP places it in a different performance bracket to the low-wattage 6W Celeron parts — it runs warmer, requires active fan cooling, and in return delivers meaningfully more sustained processing capability than its passively cooled siblings.
According to NanoReview‘s benchmark database (570 samples), the N5095 scores 501 in Geekbench 6 single-core and 1,413 in multi-core. Those numbers reflect a processor well-suited to the workloads that make up the typical home and study user’s day: multiple browser tabs, document editing, video streaming, light spreadsheet work, and video calls. The quad-core configuration handles concurrent tasks more comfortably than a dual-core chip, and the 16GB RAM allocation ensures that memory is not the limiting factor in multitasking — an important point at this price tier where restricted RAM often causes slowdowns that have nothing to do with the processor.
NotebookCheck notes that the N5095 performs broadly on par with the Core i3-1005G1 in multi-threaded tasks, which gives useful context: this is not an ultrabook-class chip, but it covers the ground that everyday computing requires without struggle.
Where performance drops off is in anything CPU-intensive over a sustained period: video rendering, large photo editing projects, running multiple demanding applications at once, or any gaming beyond very basic titles. The integrated Intel UHD Graphics with 16 execution units handles video playback well, including hardware-decoded H.265 streaming, but gaming above casual browser titles is not a realistic use case for this machine. For users who understand what they are buying — a capable everyday machine, not a performance workstation — the N5095 does its job without complaint.
For a full breakdown of how Intel’s budget and mid-range processor families compare, our Laptop CPU Guide covers the relevant tiers in plain English.
Display
The ANL5-5095 features a 15.6-inch Full HD IPS panel at 1920×1080 resolution. IPS technology brings better viewing angles and more consistent colour reproduction compared to cheaper TN panels, which is relevant for a machine that will likely see extended use for streaming, reading, and document work. Customer feedback on Amazon consistently highlights the display positively — brightness and clarity are cited as strengths, with the IPS panel making the screen comfortable to view from different positions around a desk or sofa.
The 15.6-inch size is a practical choice for a primary home laptop: large enough to work comfortably without an external display, portable enough at 1.5kg that moving it between rooms or carrying it to a library or café is not burdensome. At this price and form factor, the FHD IPS combination is well above average.
Build Quality and Design
The ANL5-5095 is a plastic-chassis machine, which is standard at this price. It is slim at 2cm and weighs 1.5kg — genuinely lightweight for a 15.6-inch laptop, and a practical attribute for daily carry. The dimensions (35.7 × 22.5cm) are compact for the screen size.
The touch ID fingerprint reader is a feature that stands out in this tier. Windows Hello biometric login means the machine unlocks quickly and without a password, which adds a layer of convenience that buyers of budget laptops do not often encounter at this price. The backlit keyboard is present, which is useful in low-light environments and another feature that cheaper competing machines at this price sometimes omit.
Port selection covers the basics: USB 3.0 for peripherals and fast file transfers, HDMI for external display output, and a 3.5mm audio jack. Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) covers both 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands — adequate for home use, though buyers in a position to choose between a Wi-Fi 5 and Wi-Fi 6 machine should note the generational difference for longer-term future-proofing.
One note worth flagging: the 16GB RAM is soldered to the motherboard and cannot be upgraded. At 16GB it starts from a strong position and is unlikely to become a practical bottleneck for everyday use, but for buyers who expect to push the machine harder over several years, it is worth knowing that memory capacity is fixed at purchase.
Real-World Performance — What Customers Say
Customer reviews on Amazon UK are generally positive. Buyers highlight the smooth multitasking experience enabled by the 16GB RAM — a recurring observation is that the machine handles multiple browser tabs, office applications, and video streaming simultaneously without the slowdowns typical of 4GB or 8GB budget laptops. The display is praised consistently, and the lightweight build is noted as a practical daily carry advantage.
Negative feedback points to the processor’s limits under heavier workloads, which is accurate: the N5095 is a budget chip and should be assessed accordingly. One reviewer noted the plastic build does not feel premium — also accurate, and expected at this price. On the whole, the consensus from buyers reflects a machine that meets and sometimes exceeds expectations for light daily use, with disappointments arising mainly when buyers approach it with expectations more appropriate to a mid-range machine.
Battery Life and Portability
The ANL5-5095 ships with a 5,000mAh battery. LEEDOW quotes approximately four hours of continuous use, which is modest — reflecting the 15W processor drawing more power than the ultra-low-wattage Celeron variants. In practice, with display brightness reduced and workloads kept light (documents, browsing, occasional video), real-world runtime tends to match or slightly exceed the quoted figure based on customer reports.
For a machine used primarily at a desk at home or in a fixed location at work, battery life is less of a concern than for buyers who genuinely need six or more hours untethered. Students carrying this between lectures would benefit from packing the charger. The lightweight build at 1.5kg makes that a manageable requirement.
Check the current price of the LEEDOW ANL5-5095 on Amazon UK.
Who Should Buy the LEEDOW ANL5-5095?
This machine makes most sense for buyers whose computing needs sit squarely in the light-to-moderate everyday tier: home users, students, older adults who want a responsive, simple Windows machine, and secondary laptop buyers who need a capable machine for browsing, documents, and streaming without spending mid-range money.
The 16GB RAM allocation is the clearest argument in its favour relative to competing machines at this price. For buyers who have previously owned budget laptops that slowed down within a year due to insufficient memory, the ANL5-5095 starts from a significantly better position.
It is not the right choice for buyers who need sustained processing performance, gaming capability, long battery life on a single charge, or a metal chassis. For those requirements, a step up in budget toward a Ryzen 5 or Core i5 machine is the appropriate answer. For everyone else, the ANL5-5095 offers a well-rounded everyday specification at a budget price.
Pros and Cons
Pros
- 16GB LPDDR4 RAM is genuinely unusual and valuable at this price point
- Full HD IPS display delivers better image quality and viewing angles than budget TN alternatives
- Lightweight at 1.5kg for a 15.6-inch machine
- Touch ID fingerprint unlock adds useful convenience
- Backlit keyboard included
- 512GB SSD with TF card expansion option provides solid storage headroom
Cons
- 5,000mAh battery limits untethered runtime to approximately four hours
- 16GB RAM is soldered — not upgradeable after purchase
- Celeron N5095 is not suited to demanding or sustained processing workloads
- Wi-Fi 5 rather than Wi-Fi 6
Final Verdict
The LEEDOW ANL5-5095 scores 7.2 out of 10.
In a market segment where memory allocations are frequently inadequate and displays are often an afterthought, the ANL5-5095 makes two correct decisions: 16GB of RAM and a Full HD IPS screen. Those two choices do more for everyday usability than the processor spec alone, and they are the reasons this machine competes credibly against rivals that cut corners on both.
The Celeron N5095 is a budget chip and should be assessed as one — it handles everyday computing tasks well and stops well short of anything demanding. Battery life is the other meaningful limitation. But for a home user, student, or secondary laptop buyer who wants a light, responsive, properly specified everyday machine in 2026, the ANL5-5095 represents solid value for money.
View the LEEDOW ANL5-5095 on Amazon UK and check today’s price.
I have spent years working in IT infrastructure and reviewing technology for British buyers. Affiliate relationships with Amazon do not influence scores or editorial assessments on this site.


