Top 10 Drawing Tablets in 2027 — Best Overall + Best Value
Direct Answer
The Wacom Intuos Pro Medium PTH-660 ($379) is the BEST OVERALL pen tablet without a screen for 2027 — 8,192 pressure levels, ±60° tilt, EMR battery-free Pro Pen 2, eight ExpressKeys plus a Touch Ring, and the most mature driver stack on Mac, Windows, and Linux. The Wacom Intuos Small CTL-4100 ($79) is the BEST VALUE — same 4,096-level EMR pen tech that Wacom built its name on, four shortcut keys, and a software bundle (Clip Studio Paint EX trial, Corel Painter Essentials) that pays for the tablet on day one.
This list ranks the 10 best screenless pen tablets of 2027 for illustrators, photo retouchers, animators, sales annotators, and anyone who wants pen input without paying display-tablet prices. Pen displays (Cintiq, Kamvas) are covered separately in er0175.
How We Ranked the Top 10 Drawing Tablets in 2027
We weighted pen technology (EMR battery-free beats battery and active rechargeable every time), pressure sensitivity (4,096 vs 8,192 levels), tilt response, active-area size relative to monitor real estate, build quality, driver maturity across Mac (especially Apple Silicon), Windows, Linux, iPadOS, and Android, shortcut key count, and software bundle value.
Sources: Wirecutter drawing-tablet guide, RTINGS-style hands-on testing notes from professional illustrators, CNET, Tom's Guide, PCMag, Creative Bloq, Digital Arts, The Verge, manufacturer spec sheets, and the r/wacom, r/huion, and r/XPpen community sentiment threads.
Weights:
- Pen tech & pressure curve — 30%
- Driver stability across OS — 20%
- Active area & ergonomics — 15%
- Shortcut keys, Touch Ring, dial controls — 15%
- Price-to-performance — 15%
- Warranty & brand support — 5%
1. Wacom Intuos Pro Medium PTH-660 🏆 BEST OVERALL
Price: $379 | Best for: Professional illustrators, photo retouchers, concept artists who want the industry-standard reference tablet.
The Intuos Pro Medium is the tablet every other manufacturer benchmarks against. Active area is 8.7 × 5.8 inches — a near-perfect match for a 27" 16:9 monitor without the wrist fatigue of the Large. The Pro Pen 2 delivers 8,192 pressure levels, ±60° tilt, and a report rate of 200 PPS, with zero battery thanks to Wacom's EMR (Electromagnetic Resonance) induction — the pen never needs charging, never dies mid-stroke.
Eight customizable ExpressKeys flank a Touch Ring with four switchable functions (brush size, zoom, scroll, rotate). Multi-touch surface, USB-C plus Bluetooth 4.2 wireless. Ten replacement nibs included plus the nib-removal ring.
Build is matte anti-glare with a textured surface that mimics paper drag. Pros: unmatched driver maturity on macOS Sequoia and Apple Silicon, EMR pen, the deepest software support (every major creative app maps natively), 2-year warranty. Con: the price is the highest in its size class.
Verdict — the default pro choice.
2. Huion Inspiroy Dial 2
Price: $199 | Best for: Pros who want Wacom-grade specs at half the price, with an extra dial.
Huion's Inspiroy Dial 2 is the closest spec-for-spec rival to the Intuos Pro Medium. Active area 10.5 × 6.56 inches — slightly larger than the Wacom — with 8,192 pressure levels and ±60° tilt. The PW517 EMR pen is battery-free with both side buttons.
Eight press keys plus two physical dials (the second dial is the headline feature — one for brush size, one for canvas rotation, both reprogrammable per app). USB-C plus 2.4 GHz wireless dongle (no Bluetooth). Driver quality has improved enormously over the past two generations and now ships clean Apple Silicon and Linux DKMS builds.
Pros: two dials, larger active area than the Wacom, battery-free EMR, includes a stand and pen holder. Con: driver still occasionally needs a relaunch after waking from sleep on macOS. Verdict — best Wacom alternative.
3. Wacom Intuos Pro Large PTH-860
Price: $499 | Best for: Animators, traditional artists translating large strokes, dual-monitor pros.
The Large is the Medium scaled up: 12.1 × 8.4 inches of active area. Same Pro Pen 2, same 8,192 pressure levels, same ±60° tilt, same eight ExpressKeys and Touch Ring. The Large makes sense if you draw with your whole arm, run a 32" or dual-monitor setup, or animate with sweeping motions in Toon Boom Harmony or TVPaint.
Anti-glare textured surface, USB-C plus Bluetooth, multi-touch. Pros: arm-friendly active area, identical pen feel to the Medium so muscle memory transfers, ships with the Pro Pen 2 and a standard nibs pack. Con: takes up serious desk real estate and the wrist travel can tire newer users.
Verdict — the animator's tablet.
4. XP-Pen Deco Pro Medium MW
Price: $219 | Best for: Illustrators who want a dial wheel + dual wheels without paying Wacom Pro money.
The Deco Pro Medium MW packs 8,192 pressure levels, ±60° tilt, and the X3 Pro Stylus — battery-free with 8 g initial activation force (about half what most pens need). Active area 11 × 6 inches. Eight shortcut keys plus a physical dial wheel and a virtual touch wheel stacked on the same control cluster.
USB-C and Bluetooth 5.0 wireless. Pros: dual-wheel cluster, low initial activation force that helps with delicate line work, magnetic pen holder. Con: drivers on Linux are unofficial and require community packages.
Verdict — best dial layout under $250.
5. Wacom Intuos Pro Paper Edition Medium
Price: $429 | Best for: Sketchbook-first artists who want their pencil drawings to digitize live.
Same hardware as the Intuos Pro Medium PTH-660 above, with one addition: the Finetip Pen and the paper clip that holds a real sketchbook directly on the tablet surface. Draw with actual ink, and the tablet captures every stroke as a vector layer for later editing in Wacom Inkspace.
All the same specs — 8,192 pressure, ±60° tilt, EMR, ExpressKeys, Touch Ring, Bluetooth, USB-C. Pros: real ink and digital capture in one workflow, bonus Finetip Pen, ideal for journalists and field sketchers. Con: the paper workflow has a learning curve and the consumable real paper adds ongoing cost.
Verdict — for traditionalists going hybrid.
6. Wacom Intuos Small CTL-4100 💎 BEST VALUE
Price: $79 | Best for: Beginners, students, sales reps annotating PDFs, anyone testing pen input.
The Intuos Small is how most working illustrators first learned. Active area 6.0 × 3.7 inches — perfect for a 13-15" laptop. 4,096 pressure levels (half the Pro line but still beyond what most beginners can articulate), the Wacom Pen 4K is battery-free EMR, and four ExpressKeys sit along the top edge.
USB-C wired only (the CTL-4100WL adds Bluetooth for $20 more). The bundled software — three apps to choose from including Clip Studio Paint Pro (6-month license), Corel Painter Essentials 8, and Corel AfterShot 3 — is worth more than the tablet itself. Pros: the EMR battery-free pen at this price is the headline, Wacom driver maturity, free pro software bundle, 2-year warranty.
Con: the active area is tight for desktop monitors larger than 24". Verdict — the best value pen tablet you can buy.
7. XP-Pen Deco Mini7W Wireless
Price: $109 | Best for: Travel artists, presenters, anyone who needs wireless without the Wacom tax.
The Deco Mini7W is a 7 × 4.37 inch active-area wireless tablet at a price most brands can't hit. 8,192 pressure levels, ±60° tilt, battery-free EMR pen (the P05D), eight shortcut keys, and a 2.4 GHz wireless dongle included in the box. Charges via USB-C with around 10 hours of cordless use per charge.
Works with Windows, Mac, Chrome OS, Android 6.0+, and Linux (community drivers). Pros: wireless at $109 with battery-free EMR, 8,192 pressure, lightweight (under 300 g) for backpack travel. Con: the shortcut keys are unlabeled — you'll want the on-screen reminder overlay until muscle memory takes over.
Verdict — the wireless steal.
8. Huion HS610
Price: $119 | Best for: Budget illustrators who want a Wacom Pro-size active area for the price of a Wacom Small.
The HS610 gives you a 10 × 6.25 inch active area — within a hair of the Intuos Pro Medium — for under $120. 8,192 pressure levels, the PW100 pen (battery-free but uses Huion's older EMR generation, no tilt), 12 shortcut keys plus 16 soft keys on the edge for application-specific commands.
USB-C wired. Pros: Pro-class active area, the highest shortcut key count on this list, 2-year warranty. Con: no tilt support on the PW100 pen — a real limitation for sketch-heavy workflows.
Verdict — most active area per dollar.
9. Gaomon S620
Price: $35 | Best for: Absolute first-timer, online whiteboard teachers, kids testing whether they like digital art at all.
The Gaomon S620 is the bare entry point. 6.5 × 4 inch active area, 8,192 pressure levels, battery-free pen (the ArtPaint AP32), four shortcut keys. USB-C wired only.
Build is plastic and the surface texture is slicker than the premium options, but for $35 the spec sheet is hard to argue with. Compatible with Windows 7+, macOS 10.12+, Android 6.0+ (via OTG), and Chrome OS 88+. Pros: $35, battery-free pen, surprisingly capable 8,192 pressure sensor.
Con: driver support is bare bones — fine for Krita and MediBang, fiddly with Adobe. Verdict — the disposable starter.
10. Wacom One Pen Tablet Medium CTC6110WLW0B
Price: $129 | Best for: Hybrid student/creator who wants official Wacom drivers and Chromebook support.
The newest Wacom One Pen Tablet (2023 refresh, still current) sits between the Intuos Small and Intuos Pro on capability. 8.5 × 5.3 inch active area, 4,096 pressure levels, the Wacom One Standard Pen (battery-free EMR, no tilt), Bluetooth Low Energy plus USB-C.
The big differentiator: official Chromebook and Android driver support, plus a software bundle including Clip Studio Paint and Adobe Fresco trials. Pros: official Chrome OS support, Wacom driver, Bluetooth wireless, larger active area than the Intuos Small.
Con: no tilt, and the pen feels lighter than the Pro Pen 2 (some pros find it less controlled). Verdict — the Chromebook artist's tablet.
Buyer Decision Tree
What to Look For When Buying a Drawing Tablet
A few things matter, and a lot of marketing-page features genuinely don't.
- Match active area to your monitor. Rule of thumb: tablet aspect ratio close to 16:10 for most desktop monitors, Small (6 × 3.7") for 13-15" laptops, Medium (8-10") for 24-27" monitors, Large (12"+) for 32"+ or dual-monitor setups. Bigger isn't better if your arm tires.
- EMR (battery-free) pens beat everything else. Wacom invented Electromagnetic Resonance; Huion and XP-Pen now license or have engineered around it. Battery-free pens never die mid-stroke, weigh less, balance better, and last a decade. Any tablet whose pen needs a USB-C charge or a AAA battery is a step backward. The XP-Pen Deco Pro, Huion Inspiroy, and every Wacom on this list use battery-free pens.
- Pressure levels: 4,096 vs 8,192 is mostly marketing. Almost no human can articulate beyond 2,048 distinct pressures with a stylus. The bigger number sells, but you'll feel the pressure curve tuning and initial activation force long before you feel the cap. Both are fine.
- Tilt response actually matters. Tilt sensitivity (±60° on the Wacom Pro Pen 2 and Huion PW517) lets you shade with the side of the nib like a real pencil. Tablets without tilt (Wacom One, Huion HS610) limit you in sketch-heavy workflows. If you draw graphite-style, demand tilt.
- Driver quality is the silent dealbreaker. Wacom drivers are still the gold standard on macOS Sequoia and Apple Silicon. Huion has caught up in the past two years. XP-Pen is reliable on Windows, sometimes flaky on Mac. Linux: Wacom is native in the kernel, Huion ships official DKMS packages, XP-Pen relies on the community digimend-kernel-drivers project. Check r/wacom, r/huion, r/XPpen for current state.
- Software bundles can be worth more than the tablet. Wacom's Intuos Small ships with three apps (Clip Studio Paint Pro 6-month, Corel Painter Essentials 8, Corel AfterShot 3) worth ~$120 — more than the $79 tablet. Factor that in.
- Shortcut keys + dials = real productivity. Eight ExpressKeys on the Wacom Pro, the dual dials on the Huion Inspiroy Dial 2, the wheel cluster on the XP-Pen Deco Pro — these shave hours per month off keyboard reaches. Beginners undervalue them; pros refuse to work without them.
- Don't pay for multi-touch you won't use. Wacom's multi-touch surface (Pro line) is nice in theory but most pros disable it because the palm rejection is imperfect. If price-sensitive, the non-touch options work fine.
FAQ
What's the difference between a pen tablet and a pen display? A pen tablet (this list) is a flat input pad — you draw on the tablet and watch your monitor. A pen display (Wacom Cintiq, Huion Kamvas, XP-Pen Artist) has a screen built in so you draw directly on the image.
Pen displays cost 3-10× more. Many pros prefer pen tablets long-term because the ergonomics (head up, eyes on monitor) prevent neck strain. See er0175 for the pen-display ranking.
Wacom vs Huion vs XP-Pen — what's the real difference in 2027? Wacom has the deepest driver maturity, the longest warranty support, and the strongest resale. Huion has caught up on hardware (EMR pens, comparable pressure, more shortcut keys for the price) and now matches Wacom on Mac drivers for most users.
XP-Pen is the price-aggressive third option with respectable hardware but spottier driver QA, especially on Mac. For paid client work, Wacom is still the safe pick; for hobby/semi-pro, Huion offers the best spec-per-dollar.
Do I need 8,192 pressure levels? No. Human pressure articulation tops out around 2,048 distinct levels in studies. 4,096 is more than enough; 8,192 is a marketing number. Pressure curve tuning and initial activation force matter far more.
Are these tablets compatible with iPad? No — these are USB-C/Bluetooth tablets that connect to Mac/Windows/Linux (and in some cases Chromebook and Android). The iPad ecosystem uses the Apple Pencil natively. If you want pen input on an iPad, the iPad with Apple Pencil Pro is its own category.
Can I use these for handwriting notes, not just art? Yes. The Wacom Intuos Small and Wacom One are popular with teachers, lawyers, and sales reps for PDF annotation and digital whiteboarding in OneNote, Notability (Mac/iPad version), and Microsoft Whiteboard.
Pen input on a flat tablet has a learning curve of about 2-3 hours, then becomes second nature.
Does brand of pen matter when buying replacements? Yes — pens are NOT cross-compatible across brands. A Wacom Pro Pen 2 will not work on a Huion tablet, and vice versa. Buy spare pens from the same manufacturer.
Do these work on Linux? Yes. Wacom is supported natively in the Linux kernel — plug and play on Ubuntu, Fedora, Pop!_OS. Huion ships official DKMS driver packages. XP-Pen relies on the community digimend-kernel-drivers project (well-maintained but unofficial). If Linux is your daily driver, lean Wacom or Huion.
Bottom Line
The Wacom Intuos Pro Medium PTH-660 ($379) is the BEST OVERALL screenless drawing tablet for 2027 — the Pro Pen 2, EMR battery-free tech, 8,192 pressure, ±60° tilt, ExpressKeys, Touch Ring, and Wacom's still-unmatched driver stack make it the safe and right pick for any paid creative workflow.
The Wacom Intuos Small CTL-4100 ($79) is the BEST VALUE — half the active area, same EMR pen technology, plus a software bundle worth more than the tablet. Use the Buyer Decision Tree above to map your specific workflow to the right pick.
Sources
- Wirecutter — "The Best Drawing Tablets" guide (2026 update)
- Wacom — official spec sheets for Intuos Pro PTH-660 / PTH-860, Intuos CTL-4100, Wacom One CTC6110WLW0B, Intuos Pro Paper Edition
- Huion — official product pages for Inspiroy Dial 2 and HS610
- XP-Pen — official spec sheets for Deco Pro Medium MW and Deco Mini7W Wireless
- Gaomon — official S620 spec sheet
- CNET — "Best drawing tablets" roundup
- Tom's Guide — drawing tablet buying guide
- PCMag — "The Best Drawing Tablets" annual review
- Creative Bloq — "Best drawing tablets for artists"
- Digital Arts magazine — pen tablet group test
- The Verge — Wacom Intuos Pro review
- Reddit — r/wacom, r/huion, r/XPpen, r/DigitalArt community sentiment threads
- digimend-kernel-drivers GitHub project — Linux driver compatibility matrix