Microsoft’s Surface Laptop Ultra With Nvidia RTX Spark Is Coming This Fall
A New Era of AI PCs Begins
Microsoft is preparing to launch what could become the most ambitious Surface device in the company’s history. Unveiled at Computex 2026, the new Surface Laptop Ultra represents a major shift in personal computing, combining Microsoft’s premium hardware design with NVIDIA’s newly announced RTX Spark platform to create a laptop built for the age of artificial intelligence.
- A New Era of AI PCs Begins
- Why the Surface Laptop Ultra Matters
- Powered by NVIDIA’s RTX Spark Superchip
- Built for Local AI Processing
- Display and Design: Premium Hardware Meets Serious Performance
- A Rare Win for Connectivity
- Taking Aim at Apple’s MacBook Pro
- Creative Software Companies Are Already On Board
- Gaming on Windows on Arm Finally Grows Up
- Pricing and Availability
- The Bigger Picture
For years, Microsoft’s Surface lineup has showcased the best of Windows hardware. The Surface Laptop Ultra takes that philosophy much further, targeting creators, developers, engineers, AI researchers, and professionals who need workstation-class performance in a portable form factor.
The device is expected to arrive this fall alongside other RTX Spark-powered systems from manufacturers including ASUS, Dell, HP, Lenovo, and MSI.

Why the Surface Laptop Ultra Matters
The Surface Laptop Ultra is more than just another premium laptop. It marks Microsoft’s attempt to redefine what a PC can do in an era increasingly dominated by AI.
According to NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang:
“The PC is being reinvented. For forty years, you launched apps. Click. Type. With RTX Spark and Microsoft Windows, you ask — and the PC does the work.”
That vision reflects a broader industry shift toward what many companies call agentic AI—intelligent software agents capable of carrying out tasks, reasoning across applications, generating content, and automating workflows.
Rather than relying entirely on cloud computing, Microsoft and NVIDIA want these AI capabilities to run directly on users’ devices, improving privacy, responsiveness, and performance.
Powered by NVIDIA’s RTX Spark Superchip
At the heart of the Surface Laptop Ultra is NVIDIA’s new RTX Spark system-on-chip.
The chip combines:
- Up to 20 ARM-based CPU cores
- NVIDIA Blackwell RTX graphics
- 6,144 CUDA cores
- Fifth-generation Tensor Cores
- Up to 128GB of LPDDR5X unified memory
- Up to 1 petaflop of AI computing performance
Microsoft says the GPU performance roughly aligns with an NVIDIA RTX 5070-class graphics processor, though operating within a more power-efficient laptop environment. The platform is expected to consume up to 80 watts under heavy workloads.
The result is a machine capable of handling demanding creative and AI workloads that traditionally required bulky workstations.
Built for Local AI Processing
One of the most significant aspects of RTX Spark is its ability to run advanced AI models locally.
NVIDIA says RTX Spark-powered systems can:
- Run AI models with up to 120 billion parameters
- Handle contexts of up to one million tokens
- Generate 4K AI video
- Create high-resolution AI images
- Power personal AI agents directly on the device
- Perform advanced coding and development tasks without relying heavily on cloud services
Microsoft and NVIDIA are also collaborating on new Windows security features and the NVIDIA OpenShell runtime, designed to allow AI agents to operate securely while maintaining user privacy and control.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella described the initiative as a major step toward the company’s AI vision:
“Our goal is to deliver unmetered intelligence to every home and every desk with Windows. RTX Spark marks a real breakthrough towards that vision.”
Display and Design: Premium Hardware Meets Serious Performance
Despite the workstation-level specifications, Microsoft has maintained the sleek design language that has defined the Surface brand.
The Surface Laptop Ultra features:
- 15-inch PixelSense Ultra MiniLED display
- Up to 2,000 nits peak HDR brightness
- High-resolution touchscreen panel
- Premium aluminum chassis
- Weight around 2 kilograms
- Black and Dark Silver finish options
Microsoft claims the thermal capacity of the device is approximately 2.5 times greater than that of the Surface Laptop 7 15-inch, allowing the system to sustain demanding workloads more effectively.
For creative professionals, the bright MiniLED display and enhanced cooling could make the device particularly appealing for video editing, 3D rendering, and AI-assisted production.
A Rare Win for Connectivity
In an industry increasingly focused on minimalist port selections, Microsoft has taken a different approach.
The Surface Laptop Ultra includes:
- Three USB-C ports
- HDMI output
- USB-A port
- Full-size SD card reader
- 3.5mm headphone jack
The inclusion of both legacy and modern connectivity options positions the laptop as a practical tool for professionals who regularly work with cameras, external displays, storage devices, and studio equipment.
Microsoft has also retained Windows Hello facial recognition and a user-replaceable SSD, features often appreciated by enterprise customers and power users.
Taking Aim at Apple’s MacBook Pro
Perhaps the clearest message from Microsoft’s announcement is its intention to compete directly with Apple’s high-end MacBook Pro lineup.
The Surface Laptop Ultra matches Apple’s flagship notebooks in size and portability while offering:
- Greater port variety
- Replaceable storage
- Massive unified memory options
- Full CUDA support
- Native Windows compatibility
- Advanced AI capabilities optimized for Windows environments
Microsoft executive Brett Ostrum emphasized the company’s ambitions:
“Surface has always exemplified the best of what a Windows PC can be. With Surface Laptop Ultra, we’re bringing that focus to creators, developers and engineers who need serious performance in a device that is thoughtfully designed, portable and deeply connected to the Windows tools and platform they count on.”
Creative Software Companies Are Already On Board
NVIDIA revealed that more than 100 software providers are supporting RTX Spark.
Adobe is among the most significant partners.
The company is rearchitecting Photoshop and Premiere Pro to leverage RTX Spark’s unified memory architecture and AI acceleration. NVIDIA says users can expect up to twice the AI and graphics performance in supported workflows.
Other major software platforms embracing RTX Spark include:
- Blender
- Blackmagic Design
- CapCut
- ComfyUI
- OTOY
- Numerous game development studios
This software support could become one of the platform’s strongest advantages, particularly among content creators and AI developers.
Gaming on Windows on Arm Finally Grows Up
The Surface Laptop Ultra is also a major step forward for gaming on Windows on Arm.
NVIDIA’s Blackwell graphics architecture, combined with technologies such as:
- DLSS
- Reflex
- Ray tracing
- CUDA acceleration
- G-SYNC support
could make ARM-based Windows devices far more capable gaming platforms than previous generations.
Major gaming companies including Riot Games, NetEase, Remedy Entertainment, KRAFTON, and Xbox are supporting the platform, signaling growing confidence in Windows on Arm gaming.
Pricing and Availability
Microsoft has not officially announced pricing.
However, industry estimates suggest the Surface Laptop Ultra will occupy the premium end of the market, likely competing directly with high-end MacBook Pro configurations.
Expected pricing could begin around:
- $3,000 for entry-level configurations
- Up to $7,000 for fully configured models with 128GB RAM and multiple terabytes of storage
The Surface Laptop Ultra is scheduled to launch this fall alongside a broader family of RTX Spark-powered laptops and desktop PCs.
The Bigger Picture
The Surface Laptop Ultra is not simply another Surface product. It represents Microsoft’s vision for the next generation of computing—one where AI becomes a built-in capability rather than a cloud service accessed through a browser.
With up to 128GB of unified memory, petaflop-scale AI performance, RTX-class graphics, advanced creative capabilities, and a renewed focus on Windows on Arm, the device could become one of the most important Windows laptops released in years.
Whether it ultimately succeeds will depend on software support, real-world performance, and pricing. But one thing is clear: Microsoft and NVIDIA are betting that the future PC will be more than a productivity tool—it will be an intelligent assistant, creative studio, gaming platform, and AI workstation all in one device.
