Dell Latitude 5400 (Renewed) — Editorial Review & Buying Guidance
The Dell Latitude 5400 launched in 2019 as a 14-inch business laptop with Intel 8th-Gen Core processors. In the renewed market, the 5400 occupies a value tier where the original build quality, port selection, and serviceability make it competitive against new budget laptops in the same price range. The independent reviews below captured the laptop's strengths at launch, and most of those strengths transfer cleanly to the renewed market.
Headline Findings from Independent Reviews
LaptopMedia's full review tested the 5400 with a 68 Wh battery and recorded 17 hours of web-browsing runtime and 18.5 hours of video playback — substantially above the category average for 14-inch business laptops of the era. Notebookcheck's coverage aggregates multiple per-model variant tests, with consistent findings on the 5400's strong port selection and serviceability.
LaptopMag's review recorded 13 hours 19 minutes of continuous Wi-Fi web browsing at 150 nits — well ahead of competing business laptops like the ThinkPad X1 Carbon (9:30) and Acer TravelMate P6 (7:34) that LaptopMag tested in the same era. The standout battery life was a defining attribute of the original launch.
Build Quality and Port Selection
The 5400's chassis is finished in plastic rather than the aluminum of premium ultrabooks, but per Neowin's review, it feels solid and dependable in daily use with sturdy hinges and a matte black exterior that holds up well to travel. Port selection is generous:
- Two USB 3.1 Gen 1 Type-A ports
- One USB-C (Thunderbolt 3 on i5/i7 configurations)
- HDMI 1.4b
- Full-size SD card reader
- Gigabit Ethernet RJ-45
- Smart card reader (Latitude business-line standard)
- 3.5mm combo audio jack
This is a port set that modern ultrabooks have largely shed — for buyers whose workflow depends on HDMI to external monitors, full-size SD for camera offload, or wired Ethernet for stable network connections, this is a meaningful advantage.
Display and Keyboard
The 5400 shipped in multiple display variants. The standard 14-inch FHD (1920×1080) panel is anti-glare and adequate for productive work but, per iTechGuides' review, brightness on the standard panel runs on the dimmer side — outdoor or window-side use is challenging. Higher-end configurations offered brighter panels.
The keyboard is described as "not exciting but functional" across reviews — a typical Dell business-line layout with adequate key travel and reliable feedback. It does not match the ThinkPad keyboard experience but holds up well for full-day typing.
Thermal Behaviour
Per Neowin's testing, the cooling solution is not built for continuous heavy workloads. During typical use (browsing, document editing, video conferencing) the laptop stays cool and quiet. Under heavier multi-core load, the fan becomes audible but does not overheat. Buyers should expect the 5400 to deliver bursty performance well and sustained heavy workloads with some thermal throttling — typical of business-laptop thermal designs of this era.
What Renewed Buyers Should Verify
- Battery health — the 5400's standout battery life depends on the cell being in good condition. A renewed unit with degraded battery will deliver substantially less than the original 13+ hour runtime. Dell-branded replacement batteries are widely available
- Storage — original NVMe drives may be approaching write-cycle limits. Consider upgrading to a fresh M.2 NVMe drive (the 5400 has a tool-less bottom panel making this a sub-10-minute job)
- Display brightness — backlight degrades with age; ask for brightness measurements if buying a critical unit
- RAM upgrade headroom — most 5400 configurations have two SODIMM slots, with one populated and one empty. The Crucial 8GB DDR4 SODIMM is a compatible upgrade path
Where the 5400 Renewed Wins Against New Budget Laptops
- Port selection — modern $500-700 laptops have shed most of these ports for a thinner chassis
- User-serviceable design — most modern budget laptops have soldered RAM and difficult-access NVMe
- Battery life headroom — even with a degraded battery, the 5400's original 17+ hour runtime leaves more buffer than newer budget laptops with smaller original batteries
- Build quality — Latitude business chassis is engineered for fleet deployment, not consumer-grade plastic
Sources & Citations
- LaptopMedia, "Dell Latitude 5400 Review," laptopmedia.com (accessed 2026-05-16)
- Notebookcheck, "Dell Latitude 14 5400 Series external reviews," notebookcheck.net (accessed 2026-05-16)
- LaptopMag, "Dell Latitude 5400 Review," laptopmag.com (accessed 2026-05-16)
- Neowin, "Dell Latitude 5400 Review," neowin.net (accessed 2026-05-16)
- iTechGuides, "Dell Latitude 5400 Review," itechguides.com (accessed 2026-05-16)
- Dell, "Latitude 5400 setup and specifications guide," dell.com (accessed 2026-05-16)
Last verified: 2026-05-16
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