![]() Despite the bezel around the screen being fairly chunky by today’s standards, the hardware remains excellent. This in many ways isn’t a bad thing, however. Honestly, if you did a blind guess which is which, even the tech savviest buyer would struggle to tell the difference. The familiarity isn’t helped by the fact that they’re almost identical in size, both featuring 12.4-inch AMOLED displays. ![]() Both are charged using USB C and feature micro SD slots, which makes it quick and easy to upgrade their internal storage. Visually, there’s not much to differentiate between the two tablets. Over the last year we’ve used the Tab S7 Plus as a functioning laptop frequently, with its keyboard cover one of the best around, offering well spread out keys with a wonderfully tactile feel. The only downside is you have to pay extra for a keyboard cover on both devices, which is a pain as they retail for over £100/$100 on Samsung’s store, and if you want to make the most of the tablet you really need one. Normally Samsung devices’ value plummets fairly quickly once a new version comes out, or it gets a little long in the tooth. It’s impressive as it shows how little the device’s value has depreciated over the years. We’re expecting the price to drop even further now that the new tablet is out, but at the time of publishing the Galaxy Tab S7 Plus price was still at £776.52 on Amazon. The price puts the tablet above the Galaxy Tab S7 Plus, which carried a cheaper £799 starting price when it launched in 2020. We’ve contacted Samsung for US and Euro pricing, but at the time of publishing hadn’t received a reply. This gets you the tablet with a USB C cable and S Pen Stylus.
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