Your laptop’s “generation” usually comes from the first digits of its CPU model name, plus the naming rules used for that chip family.
You don’t need a spec sheet to figure this out. Grab the processor line from your system settings, read the model code, and match it to the brand’s pattern.
This helps when you’re comparing two used laptops, hunting drivers, checking upgrade options, or trying to tell if a listing is describing the right machine.
Get The Exact Processor Name From Your Laptop
Start by pulling the CPU name from the operating system. Stickers and listings can be wrong. The system-reported processor string is the reliable source.
Find Your CPU On Windows
Go to Settings → System → About. Under “Device specifications,” copy the processor line.
Need a deeper readout? Press Windows + R, type msinfo32, and press Enter. “System Summary” shows the processor string and the laptop model name.
Find Your CPU On macOS
Open the Apple menu → About This Mac. Intel Macs list an Intel CPU line. Apple silicon Macs show a chip name like M1, M2, or M3.
Find Your CPU On ChromeOS And Linux
On ChromeOS, open Settings → About ChromeOS → Diagnostics to see the CPU line. On Linux, run lscpu and read “Model name.”
Decode Intel Core Generation From The Digits After The Dash
Many laptops use Intel Core names like “i5-10210U” or “i7-12700H.” The digits after the dash usually carry the generation signal.
Intel’s own naming overview explains how processor names and numbers map to product families and generations. Intel® Processor Names, Numbers and Generation List is the clean reference to keep bookmarked.
Read 4-Digit Intel Core Models
If you see four digits after the dash, the first digit is the generation.
- i7-8550U → 8th generation
- i5-7200U → 7th generation
- i3-5005U → 5th generation
Read 5-Digit Intel Core Models
If you see five digits after the dash, the first two digits are the generation.
- i5-1135G7 → 11th generation
- i7-1260P → 12th generation
- i9-13900H → 13th generation
Use Suffix Letters As A Reality Check
The letters at the end don’t tell the generation, but they hint at the laptop class.
- U: lower-power mobile chips
- P: thin-and-light performance class
- H: higher-power mobile chips
- HK: H-class with unlocked tuning
If a listing says “H-series gaming laptop” but the CPU ends in U, the seller might be mixing models.
Handle Intel Core Ultra Names Without Guesswork
Some newer laptops say “Core Ultra 5 125H” or “Core Ultra 7 155U.” Treat “Ultra 5/7/9” as the tier, then read the number block as the SKU. For quick comparisons, match the first digit of that SKU across two laptops, then match the class letter (U or H), then look at the rest of the digits.
If the seller only writes “Core Ultra 7,” ask for the full code. That one line is the difference between two different chip families.
Decode AMD Ryzen Laptop Generations By Splitting The Code
AMD Ryzen laptop CPUs often look like “Ryzen 5 5500U” or “Ryzen 7 7840U.” Start by splitting the 4-digit number from the suffix.
Older Ryzen naming is often read as “first digit = series family.” Newer mobile naming can fold in a model-year digit and an architecture digit. AMD’s one-page decode chart for Ryzen PRO mobile shows the digit roles and the model-year marker used in that scheme. How to Decode Ryzen PRO 7000 Series is handy when you’re matching a used laptop to a release year.
Read Ryzen Suffix Letters
The trailing letters often signal the power class. This helps you compare two “same generation” laptops that perform nothing alike.
- U: thinner laptops, lower power draw
- HS: thin chassis with higher limits
- HX: higher limits, often paired with stronger cooling
Table: CPU Name Patterns That Reveal The Laptop’s Era
Use these patterns as a quick scan tool when you see a processor line in a listing or in settings.
| CPU String You Might See | What It Usually Means | Generation Clue |
|---|---|---|
| Intel Core i5-8250U | 8th-gen U-class mobile | First digit after the dash is 8 |
| Intel Core i7-1165G7 | 11th-gen with integrated graphics tier code | First two digits after the dash are 11 |
| Intel Core i7-12700H | 12th-gen H-class mobile | First two digits after the dash are 12 |
| Intel Core Ultra 7 155U | Core Ultra tier + SKU | Match first SKU digit when comparing |
| AMD Ryzen 5 5500U | Ryzen 5000 U-class mobile | First digit of the 4-digit block is 5 |
| AMD Ryzen 7 7840U | Ryzen mobile with model-year style code | Use AMD’s decode chart for that scheme |
| Apple M2 | Apple silicon generation label | M2 is the generation name |
| Apple M3 Pro | M3 generation with higher core counts | M3 is the generation, “Pro” is the tier |
| Intel Pentium / Celeron | Non-Core naming varies by family | Use full model code, not i-series rules |
When “Generation” Refers To The Laptop Model, Not The CPU
Some manufacturers label the whole laptop with a generation tag, like “Gen 10” on certain business models. That label is for the chassis design and parts layout. The CPU generation is a separate label.
If you’re buying parts, the laptop model generation helps. If you’re judging speed, battery life, and video features, the CPU generation matters more. Write down both so you don’t mix them up.
Table: Where To Read The Generation Signal On Each Platform
This table tells you the one field to capture, then how to decode it.
| Platform Or CPU Family | What To Copy | How To Decode |
|---|---|---|
| Intel Core i-series | Full CPU string with the dash digits | 4 digits → first digit; 5 digits → first two digits |
| Intel Core Ultra | Ultra tier + full SKU number | Match first SKU digit and class letter |
| AMD Ryzen laptop CPUs | Ryzen tier + 4-digit code + suffix | Split digits, then map with AMD decode chart when needed |
| Apple M-series | Chip name | M1/M2/M3 is the generation name |
| ChromeOS | Diagnostics CPU line | Decode by brand rules once you have the model code |
| Linux | lscpu model name |
Decode by brand rules once you have the model code |
| Used listings | Screenshot of the CPU line | Ignore “i7” alone; use the digits after the dash |
What “Generation” Can Tell You And What It Can’t
CPU generation is a rough timestamp. It often tracks which Wi-Fi standards were common, which video codecs decode smoothly, and which operating systems get the cleanest driver packages.
It doesn’t guarantee speed on its own. A lower-power chip from a newer generation can lose to an older, higher-power chip in long tasks. Cooling, power limits, and RAM setup shape the real result.
Use generation as the first filter, then verify the rest of the build.
Common Mix-Ups That Waste Money
A few patterns show up again and again in listings and hand-me-down laptops. Catching them takes seconds once you know what to look for.
- Tier vs generation: “Core i7” is a tier, not a generation. The digits after the dash do the real work.
- Laptop line generation vs CPU generation: “Gen 9” on a business laptop name can refer to the chassis revision, not the processor era.
- CPU suffix confusion: A U-suffix chip can be sold as “gaming” because it says i7 or Ryzen 7. The suffix is the better clue for sustained performance.
- Copy-paste specs: Some sellers reuse specs from a similar model. Ask for a screenshot of the CPU line before paying.
Use These Cross-Checks When The Listing Feels Off
When a model string is missing or cropped, you can still confirm the era with a couple of quick checks.
Match The Laptop Model And The CPU Family
In Windows System Information, grab the “System Model” too. Then search that exact model name plus the CPU code in the listing. If the seller claims a newer CPU generation than the model line ever shipped with, ask for a clearer screenshot.
Use RAM And Storage As Hints
DDR3-era laptops usually pair with older CPU families. DDR5 is more common on newer designs. SATA-only storage tends to appear more in older machines; NVMe is common on newer ones. Treat this as a gut-check, not a strict rule.
How To Know What Generation Your Laptop Is When Shopping Used
When you’re buying used, ask for one clean photo: the Windows About page, a macOS About This Mac window, or a ChromeOS Diagnostics screen. You want the full processor line, not a seller’s memory of it.
Once you have that line, decode it in three moves:
- Copy the CPU string.
- Find the digit block (Intel dash digits, Core Ultra SKU, or Ryzen 4-digit code).
- Map that block using the brand pattern.
If a listing says “11th gen i5” but shows “i5-8250U,” that’s an 8th-gen chip. Fixing that mismatch early saves you from overpaying.
Pick A Generation Range That Fits Your Work
Generation is one filter, not the full story. Two laptops from the same CPU generation can behave differently based on cooling, power limits, and RAM speed.
Still, generation is a handy first cut. Pair it with the power-class letter and your workload:
- Web, documents, school work: U-class chips can be enough if RAM is decent.
- Photo work, light video, coding: look for newer generations or higher-power classes.
- Gaming and heavy creation apps: H, HS, or HX classes tend to hold speed longer.
When you compare two listings, write three lines on paper: CPU generation (or Series), CPU class letter, and RAM amount. That trio can expose the real difference at a glance.
References & Sources
- Intel.“Intel® Processor Names, Numbers and Generation List.”Explains how Intel processor names and number patterns relate to families and generations.
- AMD.“How to Decode Ryzen PRO 7000 Series.”Shows how Ryzen PRO mobile naming digits map to model year, tier, and architecture markers.