
Large Android tablets have long occupied an awkward middle ground. They’re capable enough to replace a laptop for basic tasks, but the best ones tend to carry prices that push them out of reach for most people. Apple’s iPad Pro remains the benchmark, but it demands a premium few can justify. Smaller competitors have tried to close that gap, though few have done so convincingly at the high end.
The Moto Pad 70 Pro takes a different approach by packing a flagship-grade experience into a price most people can actually stomach. It’s a 13-inch tablet running on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8s Gen 4, and it comes with the Moto Pen Pro stylus already in the box. That last detail is worth pausing on, considering that rival devices often charge extra for that same privilege.
Designer: Motorola
The display is the first thing that wins you over, and rightly so. The 13-inch screen hits a 3.5K resolution, runs at 144Hz, and supports Dolby Vision with 12-bit color depth. At 800 nits in HBM mode, it handles most well-lit rooms with little trouble. For streaming, sketching, or just browsing through a long article, the panel holds up comfortably.
Performance is handled by the Snapdragon 8s Gen 4, which Motorola claims scores around 2.5 million on AnTuTu. In practical terms, that means the tablet can run games at 120FPS without breaking a sweat. It ships with Android 16 and is promised updates through Android 18, alongside security patches until 2030. Storage goes up to 256GB internally, with a microSD slot supporting cards up to 2TB.
The Moto Pen Pro is included in the box, which makes a bigger difference than it might seem. It connects to AI tools like Sketch to Image, which turns rough doodles into finished artwork, and AI Live Transcript, which converts spoken audio to text in real time. Smarter Reader, meanwhile, summarizes long documents on the fly. These features feel genuinely practical when the stylus is already in your hand.
Audio on a tablet this size can either be forgettable or genuinely useful, and the Moto Pad 70 Pro leans toward the latter. Four JBL speakers tuned with Dolby Atmos make the difference noticeable, especially during video calls, movie sessions, or when someone’s presenting a slide deck to a small group. It’s the kind of audio setup that makes you reach for external speakers far less often.
Battery life is anchored by a 10,200 mAh cell with 45W charging, though Motorola bundles a 68W adapter in the box. The tablet’s productivity credentials go further with a PC Mode that gives the interface a desktop feel, and Smart Connect for file sharing between devices. A snap-on keyboard is available separately, and a USB Type-C 3.2 port lets you hook it up to an external display.
The Moto Pad 70 Pro goes on sale July 4 in India, starting at ₹36,999, roughly $395, for the 8GB/128GB variant and ₹39,999, around $425, for the 8GB/256GB model. It has no LTE option, and the single Pantone Titan finish doesn’t leave much room for personalization. But at 6.2mm thin, weighing 589g, and with a bundled stylus already in the box, there’s a lot here for the price.