Juno Computers has opened pre-orders for the Juno Tab 4 13-inch, but the tablet is arriving with two clear caveats: a near-$1,000 price tag and a delivery window that stretches far into the future. For buyers looking for a Linux tablet with laptop-like ambitions, the wait may be as notable as the hardware itself.
The company had already announced two models in the series, the Juno Tab 4 10.5-inch LTE and the Juno Tab 4 13-inch, but without pricing or availability details. That has now changed for the larger model, while the 10-inch LTE version still does not have a listed price or release date.
What the 13-inch model offers
The Juno Tab 4 13-inch uses a 13-inch IPS panel with a 1600 × 2560 resolution, 60Hz refresh rate, and stylus support. Under the hood, it runs on an Intel Core Ultra 5 115U processor, paired with 16GB of LPDDR5 memory and a removable 1TB M.2 2280 NVMe PCIe 3.0 x4 SSD.
| Specification | Juno Tab 4 13-inch |
|---|---|
| Display | 13-inch IPS, 1600 × 2560, 60Hz |
| Processor | Intel Core Ultra 5 115U |
| Memory | 16GB LPDDR5 |
| Storage | 1TB removable M.2 2280 NVMe PCIe 3.0 x4 SSD |
It also includes 5MP cameras on both the front and rear, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2, two USB 3.1 Type-C ports with video-out support, and one USB 3.0 Type-A port. The overall setup points more toward compact productivity than a typical media-first tablet.
Pricing and delivery timing
In the US, the tablet is listed at $989, while in the UK it costs £949 including VAT. Buyers can also add encrypted storage for an extra $12 or £10.
Juno says production will begin after the pre-order period ends, but it has not said when that window will close. The company has stated that shipping should start about 90 to 100 days after the campaign ends, which places the earliest expected delivery around October 2026.
Built for a narrow audience
The tablet ships with stereo speakers, a microphone, and two cooling fans inside a magnesium alloy body. It also comes with a removable backlit keyboard and a stylus, matching the accessory bundle offered with the smaller model.
At the same time, Juno leaves out a microSD slot and LTE support, making the device less flexible for some buyers. The battery is rated at 42.71Wh, and the package includes a 65W charger.
That combination of Intel hardware, removable storage, and bundled accessories suggests a product aimed at Linux users who want a portable device that can still work like a small laptop. The trade-off is a high entry price and a shipping timeline that asks for patience before the first units arrive.
For now, the Juno Tab 4 13-inch stands out less as an impulse buy and more as a specialized machine for users willing to commit early. Its appeal is clear, but so is the wait.
