Lenovo has officially launched the Yoga AIO i Aura Edition in the United States, bringing its high-spec 32-inch all-in-one desktop to a new market. The device, first introduced during CES 2026 in Las Vegas, had been limited to select regions since its announcement in January. After arriving in areas such as Australia and Europe earlier this spring, US availability now follows—though Canadian customers are still seeing a “coming soon” status.
US Pricing and Initial Configuration
The American debut comes with a fixed hardware profile and no build-to-order options, unlike the flexible configurations seen in other territories. The single US SKU is priced at $3,097.99. For the moment, Lenovo is not offering any customization choices stateside, and it remains unclear whether that will change. The company has not provided a timeline for when, or if, alternative specifications will appear for the North American market.
Processing Power and Graphics
At the heart of the Yoga AIO i Aura Edition sits Intel’s Core Ultra X7 358H. This 16-core processor combines 4 Cougar Cove P-Cores with 8 Darkmont E-Cores, plus an additional 4 lower-clocked Darkmont E-Cores for background efficiency. The chip also integrates the Arc B390, a potent integrated GPU with 12 Xe3 cores. According to Lenovo, the Arc B390 delivers enough performance to handle demanding games at 1080p and, in certain titles, even at 1440p.
Memory, Storage, and Display
Complementing the processor are 32 GB of LPDDR5X RAM operating at 9,600 MT/s and a 1 TB M.2 2280 NVMe SSD. The star of the setup, however, is the 32-inch 4K OLED touchscreen. It runs at an impressive 165 Hz refresh rate and carries an SDR brightness rating of 225 nits, which Lenovo says can peak at 1,000 nits when displaying HDR content. Such capabilities place the AIO squarely among premium desktop displays aimed at both creative professionals and entertainment enthusiasts.
Broader Market Context
The Yoga AIO i Aura Edition enters a segment where Apple’s latest iMac with an M4 chip and 24 GB of RAM retails for close to $2,000, giving Lenovo’s offering a distinct high-end positioning thanks to its larger OLED panel, stronger integrated graphics, and higher refresh rate. With the desktop now shipping in the US, the company is betting that buyers seeking a compact yet powerful setup will see the value in that fixed, premium blueprint.
Sources: www.amazon.com, www.lenovo.com