Your ASUS laptop’s model shows up on its bottom label, in BIOS, and in Windows “About” settings, so you can confirm the full name without guessing.
ASUS names can get messy fast. A store listing might say “ZenBook 14,” your box might say “UX3402,” and Windows might show a shorter label. That mismatch wastes time when you’re trying to grab the right driver, replace a charger, check upgrade parts, or sell the laptop with clean details.
This walks you through a no-drama way to nail the model you should trust, plus the extra identifiers that make the model name actionable.
What Counts As “Model” On An ASUS Laptop
People say “model” and mean different things. On ASUS laptops, you’ll run into three names that look similar but serve different jobs.
Marketing Name
This is what you see on listings and ads, like “ZenBook 14” or “TUF Gaming A15.” It’s reader-friendly, but it can hide big differences across years and variants.
Model Code
This is the short code that usually matters for drivers and parts matching, like “UX3402” or “FA507.” It’s the one you want in your notes.
Full Variant Or SKU String
This is the longer tag that separates close siblings, like “UX3402VA” vs “UX3402ZA,” or a string that includes region and feature bits. If you’re shopping for a screen, keyboard, battery, fan, or hinge parts, this is often the tie-breaker.
Serial Number
This is not the model, but it’s the strongest identity marker for your exact unit. Some ASUS pages let you pull the right page or warranty details using it.
Start With The Physical Label First
If you can reach the bottom of the laptop, this is the fastest “no software needed” path. It also works when Windows won’t boot.
Check The Bottom Sticker
Flip the laptop over and scan for a sticker that includes a “Model” field or a short code that starts with letters and numbers. On many units, you’ll see the model code clearly printed, plus the serial number nearby.
If the sticker is worn, shine a light across it at an angle. It can make faint text pop without any tools.
Check The Box Or Paperwork If You Still Have It
The packaging label often has the cleanest print. It may show the model code, a longer SKU line, and the serial number in one place. If you bought the laptop used, ask the seller for a photo of the box label if they still have it.
When you want the ASUS step-by-step for where the model name can appear on packaging and labels, this ASUS page lines it up clearly: How to Find Model Name.
How To Know What Model My Asus Laptop Is
If the sticker is missing or you want a second confirmation, Windows can show the model in a couple of spots. Start with the quickest one, then move to deeper tools if the result looks too generic.
Method 1: Windows Settings “About” Page
This is the simplest check. It won’t always show the full variant string, but it often gives a usable model line.
- Open Settings.
- Go to System.
- Select About.
- Look for the model line shown near your device name.
Microsoft documents this path with screenshots and naming details here: Find information about your Windows device.
Method 2: System Information (Msinfo32)
This is the next step when Settings feels vague. It also helps when you need one clean line to paste into a driver search.
- Press Windows + R.
- Type msinfo32 and press Enter.
- Stay on System Summary.
- Find System Model.
If you see a short code like “UX3402” or “FA507,” that’s usually the model code you want. If you see something broad like “ASUS Notebook,” don’t stop here—jump to the next method.
Method 3: Command Prompt (WMIC) For A Quick Model String
This can be faster than clicking around, and it often returns a clearer model code than Settings.
- Open Command Prompt.
- Run: wmic csproduct get name
- Run: wmic bios get serialnumber
Write down both outputs. The model code helps with drivers and parts. The serial number helps with unit-level identity when you’re checking warranty or matching a board revision.
Method 4: PowerShell For Model + Version In One Pass
If you like a clean result you can paste into a note, PowerShell can print the model and a few system identifiers together.
- Open Windows PowerShell.
- Run: Get-CimInstance Win32_ComputerSystem | Select-Object Manufacturer, Model
If the Model field looks short, pair it with the bottom label or BIOS to confirm the full variant.
When Windows Shows A Generic Name
Sometimes Windows reports a broad label that’s not useful for downloads or parts. That can happen after a board swap, a BIOS mismatch, or a Windows install that doesn’t pull the clean branding data.
Use BIOS As The Tie-Breaker
BIOS is closer to the hardware identity than Windows. If Windows looks muddy, BIOS usually stays steady.
- Restart the laptop.
- Tap F2 as it starts up.
- Look for a model field on the main page or in a system info area.
If you don’t see it right away, scan the first few BIOS pages for “Product Name,” “Model,” or “System Information.”
Match The Model Code With The Family Name
Once you have a code like “UX3402,” you can match it back to a family name like “ZenBook.” Stores and listings love the family name. Driver pages and parts listings love the code. Keep both in your notes.
Model-Finding Methods At A Glance
Use this as a simple chooser. If your laptop boots, start with Windows. If it won’t, start with the label or BIOS.
| Where You Check | What You Usually Get | When It Works Best |
|---|---|---|
| Bottom label | Model code + serial | No boot, fastest confirmation |
| Box label | Model code + longer SKU string | Selling the laptop, matching exact variant |
| Windows Settings → About | Device model line | Quick check during setup |
| Msinfo32 (System Information) | System Model | Cleaner model string than Settings |
| WMIC in Command Prompt | Model name field + serial | Copy/paste model fast |
| PowerShell (CIM) | Manufacturer + model | Simple output for notes or tickets |
| BIOS screen | Hardware-level product name | Windows shows generic labels |
| Warranty card or paperwork | Model + serial | Label worn off, box missing |
Write Down The Model Details The Right Way
Once you find the model, don’t stop at one line. A clean note prevents mix-ups later.
Use A Three-Line Note
- Model code: the short code you found (like UX3402, FA507, X515).
- Full variant string: the longer version if you have it (like UX3402VA, FA507RM).
- Serial number: copy it exactly, including letters.
Why This Note Saves You Time
Drivers, BIOS files, and firmware updates can differ across variants that look identical from the outside. Parts sellers also list compatibility by model code and variant. That three-line note keeps you from ordering the wrong screen cable or flashing the wrong BIOS file.
Common Mix-Ups That Waste Time
These mistakes show up a lot when people try to identify an ASUS laptop using only one source.
Mix-Up 1: Confusing Series With Model
“ZenBook” or “VivoBook” is a family. It narrows things down, but it won’t always land you on the right driver page. The model code does.
Mix-Up 2: Copying A Store Listing Name
Retail listings can be shortened, translated, or merged across variants. Use the label, BIOS, or Windows tools to confirm the code that ASUS uses.
Mix-Up 3: Assuming One Result Is Always Final
If Windows and the bottom label disagree, trust the hardware sources first. The label and BIOS are closer to the unit identity than a Windows label that can change after updates or repairs.
What To Do If The Sticker Is Missing
A missing label is common on older laptops or units that had the bottom case replaced. You can still pin down the model cleanly.
Use BIOS First
BIOS usually shows a product name or model field. If you can reach BIOS, you can usually reach the model code.
Use Msinfo32 And WMIC Together
Msinfo32 can show a System Model line. WMIC can return a model name field and serial number. If both agree, you can treat the model code as confirmed.
Check The Box Label Photo
If you bought used, ask for a photo of the packaging label. Many sellers still have the box tucked away. It’s one of the cleanest sources for the longer SKU string.
Decoding Common ASUS Model Patterns
You don’t need to memorize the full naming logic, but a few patterns help you spot whether you’re looking at a family name, a model code, or a deeper variant.
| What You See | What It Usually Means | Where It Shows Up |
|---|---|---|
| “VivoBook 15” | Family name | Listings, stickers, boot screens |
| “X515” | Core model code | Labels, BIOS, Windows model fields |
| “X515EA” | Variant tag | Box labels, some BIOS pages |
| “UX3402” | Core model code | BIOS, Windows tools, driver pages |
| “UX3402VA” | Variant tag | Box labels, paperwork |
| Serial number string | Unit identity | Bottom label, BIOS, Windows commands |
Quick Checklist Before You Download Drivers Or Buy Parts
Use this short checklist so your model name turns into the right action.
- Confirm the model code from the bottom label or BIOS.
- Grab the variant string from the box label when you can.
- Copy the serial number for unit-level checks.
- Keep a screenshot of System Information if you’re sending details to a repair shop.
If You Need One “Best” Method
If you want a single method that works for most people: check the bottom label first, then confirm it in Msinfo32. That combo gives you a hardware source plus a software source, which is usually enough to stop second-guessing.
References & Sources
- ASUS.“How to Find Model Name.”Shows where the model name appears on packaging, paperwork, and the product label.
- Microsoft.“Find information about your Windows device.”Lists the Windows Settings path to see device name and model on the About page.