CES 2026: Acer refreshes Swift lineup with Intel Core Ultra 3 series

At CES 2026, Acer refreshed its entire Swift portfolio, which includes the Acer Swift 16 AI, Swift Edge AI series, and the Swift Go series. These Copilot+ PCs are based on the latest Intel Panther Lake series, i.e., Core Ultra 3 series. Read on to know about these updates in detail.

Acer Swift 16 AI features and specs

The Acer Swift 16 AI is the flagship offering on the table. It comes with a premium 14.85mm sleek aluminium chassis, featuring the world’s largest haptic touchpad at 6.9 inches by 4.3 inches (175.5mm by 109.7mm). The touchpad is protected by Gorilla Glass and supports MPP 2.5 stylus input for creators and artists.

The Swift 16 boasts a massive 16-inch 16:10 3K OLED touch screen with a 120Hz refresh rate, VESA DisplayHDR True Black 500 certification, and comes with 100 percent DCI-P3 colour gamut. This ensures vivid and accurate visuals, whether you are consuming content or editing it. For audio, we have dual speakers, DTS X Ultra and anti-vibration tech.

Based on the Core Ultra 3 series, it can be configured up to Core Ultra X9 388H and Intel Arc B390 GPU, delivering up to a total of 180 TOPS. On the memory front, you can go up to 32GB of LPDDR5X memory and 2TB of PCIe Gen 5 SSD. It also features facial recognition for Windows Hello. For connectivity, it is equipped with dual Thunderbolt 4 ports, dual USB 3.2 Type A, HDMI 2.1, a MicroSD card slot, combo jack, WiFi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4.

Acer Swift Edge 14 and 16 AI features and specs

The thin and lightweight Swift Edge series comes in 14-inch and 16-inch options. The stainless steel-magnesium alloy and MIL-810H US military-grade durability give peace of mind to those who work on the go.

Both models can offer up to a 3K OLED touch display with a 120Hz refresh rate in a 16:10 aspect ratio, and come with 100 percent DCI-P3 color gamut support. The Edge 14 and Edge 16 can be configured up to a Core Ultra 9 386H processor, up to 32GB of LPDDR5x memory, and 1TB of PCIe Gen 4 SSD.

Other features include a multi-control touchpad, an IR-enabled camera for secure window login, DTS X Ultra dual speakers with anti-vibration technology, and two Thunderbolt 4.0 ports. The Acer Swift Edge 16 weighs 1.25Kg, while the Acer Swift Edge 14 AI weighs less than a kilo.

Acer Swift Go 14 and 16 features and specs

Acer also refreshed its Swift Go series with the Intel Core Ultra 3 Series, and it can be configured up to Ultra X9 388H, and Intel Arc B390 graphics. This helps in power generation up to a total of 180 TOPS, compared to 120 TOPS on the previous gen model, while improving battery life. On the memory front, the Swift Go 14 and 16 are backed with up to 32GB of LPDD5x RAM, and up to 1TB of PCIe Gen 4 SSD.

The Swift Go series features up to a 3K OLED touch VESA-certified True Black 500 display with 100 percent DCI-P3 color gamut, embodied in a sleek laser-etched aluminium chassis with MIL-STD 810H certification. The DTS X Ultra-enabled dual speakers and anti-vibration tech are also available on the Swift Go series.

Other features include a 5MP IR camera for facial recognition, a multi-control touch pad, a 70Wh battery, 2x Thunderbolt 4 ports, and WiFi 7.

Pricing and availability

The Acer Swift 16 Ai will be available in North America and Australia starting Q1 2026. It will make its way to Europe, the Middle East, and Africa in March 2026. The Acer Swift Go 16 AI will make its debut in Australia and EMEA in Q1 2026, and later it will be available in North America by Q2 2026. The rest of the models will be available in the said regions by Q2 2026.

Acer hasn’t revealed the exact specifications, pricing details as of now.

Who should consider these new Acer devices?

With the new Intel Panther Lake refresh, Acer is placing the Swift Series against the ASUS Zenbook and ProArt lineup announced at CES 2026.

The Acer Swift 16 AI is best suited for artists, creators, and graphic designers, as the larger haptic touchpad is a bold design choice that could truly set this laptop apart for creators. Allowing them to do intensive tasks like real-time language translation, advanced photo editing features with utmost precision, without having to carry a lot of accessories. With the latest Intel Panther Lake chip, the 70Wh battery can last up to 14 hours even with heavy use.

The Swift Go series is for users who need a balance of performance, portability, and value. The latest Core Ultra 3 Series chip offers a significant NPU boost compared to the Core Ultra 2, enabling faster AI tasks like photo editing features or more efficient video conferencing background effects, making these laptops ideal for professionals who rely heavily on AI-powered applications.

The Acer Swift Edge is a middle ground between the Swift 16 AI and the Swift Go series. It is targeted to users who want a longer battery backup without compromising on the latest tech, be it the Core Ultra 3 refresh, introduction of IR unlock, etc.

If you’re a creative professional heavily reliant on AI features and considering an upgrade, these models might be worth waiting for a full review, especially given the promised NPU boost. Otherwise, if you have a Core Ultra 1 or 2 machine, the NPU boost might not be significant enough for a day-one upgrade unless AI is critical to your workflow.