SANTA CLARA, California, April 18, 2026, 11:34 PDT
Intel pushed its Core Series 3 mobile chips out to the budget laptop market, commercial machines, and edge hardware, extending the reach of its 18A process far past just high-end models. The chipmaker said partners started shipping Core Series 3 systems for both consumer and business buyers as of April 16. Over 70 designs are still lined up for launch this year.
Timing is key here. AI features, pricier components, and Windows upgrades are nudging PC buyers toward the latest hardware, just as Intel is eager to showcase products using its cutting-edge process tech. “The chips arrive at a time when prices are rising and expectations are shifting,” said Josh Newman, Intel’s general manager and VP of Consumer PC in the Client Computing Group. Newsroom
Intel is getting a manufacturing angle to push with this launch. The Register noted that Core Series 3 chips are being produced on Intel 18A at U.S. facilities—a shift, after much of Intel’s client-chip production went to TSMC in 2024.
Intel’s top Core 7 360 comes with six CPU cores—two tuned for performance, four designed for efficiency. Specs list a turbo max of 4.8 GHz, base power at 15 watts, with turbo peaking at 35 watts. Memory support goes up to 64 GB. Graphics? Two Xe cores onboard, plus a neural processing unit (NPU) rated for 17 TOPS, shorthand for trillions of AI operations every second.
Intel is listing seven Core Series 3 processors—covering Core 3, Core 5, and Core 7. Six cores show up on almost every chip, except for the Core 3 304, which features five. Every model is currently slated to be available in Q2 2026.
Intel is framing the line as a five-year upgrade route, steering clear of touting it as a pure performance monster. The company touts up to 47% higher single-thread speeds and a 41% boost in multi-threaded tasks compared to an older Core i7-1185G7, plus GPU AI performance up to 2.7x stronger than the previous-gen Core 7 150U. These figures come from Intel’s own tests, not from third-party reviews.
Acer’s Aspire Go lineup, HP’s Omnibook 5 14, and MSI’s Modern 14S and 16S are among the first partner systems out of the gate, with Asus, Lenovo, Dell Technologies, and Samsung working on upcoming releases. Wider rollout hinges on each OEM’s own timeline, but don’t expect chip specs to be the only factor; laptop price points will play a major role in shaping that initial batch.
Intel is targeting edge computing with the new chips—think devices handling data right where it’s gathered, from smart buildings to retail terminals and industrial cameras. According to the company, its Core 7 350 outperforms Nvidia’s Jetson Orin Nano in certain object detection, image classification, and video analytics tasks. Edge systems are expected to arrive in the second quarter.
There’s a wrinkle here. Microsoft’s Copilot+ PCs demand an NPU with over 40 TOPS, plus 16 GB RAM and 256 GB storage. Intel’s Core Series 3 NPU only hits 17 TOPS on its own, though Intel points to a combined 40 platform TOPS when you tally CPU, GPU, and NPU output. Bottom line: plenty of devices may meet Intel’s “AI-ready” description but still miss the mark for the Copilot+ PC badge. Microsoft
Even with a cheaper spec sheet, the sticker price is still uncertain. Core Series 3, as The Verge pointed out, drops CPU cores, graphics cores, PCIe lanes, and Thunderbolt ports compared to Core Ultra Series 3. Fewer features should mean cheaper laptops, but that depends on what manufacturers actually charge once these devices hit the market.
The news dropped just ahead of the weekend lull, when U.S. equities take their Saturday break. Intel shares were last seen changing hands at $68.50, market data showed.
Intel’s immediate hurdle isn’t Core Series 3 topping benchmark charts. The real question: Can PC makers push out enough lower-cost 18A-based models to give Intel’s U.S.-manufactured process real volume, beyond just a headline-grabbing flagship?