If you’ve been watching the E Ink writing tablet space, reMarkable is having a busy 2026. The Norwegian company behind some of the most focused digital note taking tablets on the market is expanding its lineup, adding new software integrations, and pushing into more accessible price territory, all at once.
That combination makes right now a genuinely useful moment to understand what reMarkable offers, what each device actually costs, and what’s coming.
The Current Lineup:
reMarkable currently sells three devices. The reMarkable 2 is the longest running model and remains a capable black and white E Ink writing tablet for note taking and document markup. The Paper Pro is the flagship, featuring an 11.8 inch color E Ink display with a front light, designed for professionals who want a larger canvas. The Paper Pro Move, launched more recently, is the compact option: a 7.3 inch color E Ink Gallery 3 display with a 264 PPI resolution and writing latency as low as 12 ms.
The Paper Pro and Paper Pro Move sit between $450 and $650, which has kept reMarkable firmly in premium territory. The reMarkable 2 is more accessible at $299, but it lacks a front light and uses an older, lower density display.
A More Affordable Model is Coming:
A leak from Evan Blass, a reliable source for device leaks, revealed that reMarkable’s next tablet will be called the Paper Pure, described as more mass market focused than the Paper Pro or Paper Pro Move, with a Q2 2026 launch expected.
The Paper Pure is expected to drop the color display in favor of a black and white E Ink panel, with a screen size around 9 to 10 inches, and a price range of $250 to $300. Spec trade offs reportedly include a smaller battery, a weaker processor, and less RAM and internal storage. The stylus support stays intact, which is central to the reMarkable experience.
A confidential FCC filing from February 2026 for an unidentified reMarkable device adds further weight to the expectation of a new hardware announcement. That said, specs and pricing remain unconfirmed until an official launch.
For buyers who’ve wanted to try a dedicated digital note taking tablet without committing to a $450+ price point, the Paper Pure could be a meaningful entry point.
Software is Getting More Useful:
reMarkable devices run a closed operating system with no app store, which means every feature added to the platform arrives through official updates. In March 2026, reMarkable launched a “Send to Miro” feature for Connect subscribers, powered by a new partnership with Miro. It converts handwritten notes and sketches into editable diagrams, sticky notes, and documents using AI, so work done on the tablet moves directly into a team’s digital workflow.
This is part of a broader push to make reMarkable tablets fit naturally alongside laptops rather than replace them. Connect subscribers also get tools like Convert to Notebook from Google Drive and OneDrive, Send to Slack with AI conversion, handwriting search, and unlimited cloud storage.
Understanding the Connect Subscription:
The Connect subscription is where some of reMarkable’s most useful features live. It currently costs $3.99 per month, with a 50 day free trial for new customers, and includes unlimited cloud storage and sync, editing in the mobile and desktop apps, and up to three years of added device protection. reMarkable increased the price of Connect in March 2026.
Without Connect, the core tablet experience including writing, annotating PDFs, and reading ePub files still works. Cloud syncing stops for files that go unedited for 50 days if you cancel, but your documents remain stored. For light users, the free tier is functional. For anyone doing consistent note taking across multiple devices, Connect adds real utility.
Choosing Between the Models:
The reMarkable 2 suits buyers who want a straightforward black and white writing surface at the lowest entry price. The Paper Pro is the right pick for professionals who annotate a lot of documents or want color for marking up complex diagrams. The Paper Pro Move trades screen size for portability, fitting naturally in a jacket pocket while keeping the color display.
If the Paper Pure launches as leaked, it would add a fourth distinct option: a current generation device at a student friendly price, ideal for classrooms and first time buyers.
The reMarkable ecosystem is in an active phase right now, with new hardware, new integrations, and a price tier that could bring in a much wider audience. If you’re evaluating your options in 2026, this is the right time to pay attention.
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