Intel’s “Arrow Lake-H” mobile processors include the “Core Ultra 9 285H” (flagship) and “Core Ultra 7 255H” (step-down). Both share 16 cores (6 Performance + 8 Efficiency + 2 Low-Power Efficiency), 24MB L3 cache, and Intel Arc 140T integrated graphics. The main differences are clock speeds and power limits.
- “Core Ultra 9 285H”: Base 2.9GHz, turbo up to 5.4GHz (P-cores), TDP 45-115W.
- “Core Ultra 7 255H”: Base 2.0GHz, turbo up to 5.1GHz (P-cores), TDP often lower (28-60W in many laptops).
In theory, the Ultra 9 has higher boosts and more headroom. In practice, laptop reviews and benchmarks show “very small differences”, often just “5-12%” faster for the Ultra 9, sometimes none at all.
Key Benchmark Comparisons
Aggregated from sites like NotebookCheck, PassMark, UserBenchmark, and NanoReview:
- “Multi-core tasks” (Cinebench, rendering): Ultra 9 ~10-12% faster on average.
- “Single-core” (daily apps, browsing): Nearly identical, sometimes Ultra 7 edges out due to better efficiency.
- “Overall laptop averages” (NotebookCheck database): Ultra 9 laptops only ~6% faster than Ultra 7 ones. In some cases, Ultra 7 laptops outperform due to better cooling or tuning.
- “Gaming” (integrated graphics): Similar frame rates; differences under 10%.
- “Power and heat”: Ultra 9 draws more power (up to 47% higher) and runs hotter, leading to throttling in thin laptops.
Real user threads (Reddit, forums) echo this: Many say the Ultra 7 is “more efficient and runs cooler,” making the Ultra 9 not worth the extra cost in identical chassis.
Why the Small Gap?
Laptop makers limit power to avoid heat/noise. The Ultra 9’s higher TDP rarely gets fully used in slim designs. Both chips are on the same 3nm process with similar architecture—clock boosts don’t translate to big leaps.
Verdict: Almost No Benefits for Most Users
If you’re buying a laptop, the Core Ultra 9 285H offers “little practical advantage” over the 255H. Save money on the Ultra 7 version for better value, efficiency, and battery life. The upgrade only shines in sustained heavy workloads with good cooling (rare in mobiles). For everyday/gaming, they’re basically tied.








