ASUS VivoBook 15 Resale Value in India (2026) — How Much Will You Get?

By Bids44 Team 5 min read

Estimated Resale Value

₹17,500 ₹35,500

Based on condition, age, and market trends

₹12,500 Fair: ₹17,500 – ₹27,500 ₹37,500

How Much Is a Used ASUS VivoBook 15 Worth?

The ASUS VivoBook 15 is one of the most affordable laptops that still delivers a decent experience, making it very popular among students and first-time laptop buyers in India. A used ASUS VivoBook 15 in Good condition typically sells for ₹22,000 on Indian marketplaces. In Like New condition, you can expect up to ₹32,000, while Fair condition units sell around ₹16,000.

The VivoBook 15 covers the essentials well — models from 2022-2024 with Intel Core i5/Ryzen 5 processors, 8-16GB RAM, and SSD storage handle daily tasks smoothly. Web browsing, Microsoft Office, video calls, Netflix, and light photo editing are all comfortable. ASUS adds some style with the colour-pop design options (silver, blue, green) and a compact bezel design that makes it look more modern than its price suggests.

At its used price point (₹16,000-₹32,000), the VivoBook 15 competes mainly on value. Buyers are not looking for premium build quality — they want a functional, reliable machine at a good price. This means condition matters enormously: a well-maintained VivoBook 15 with a clean screen, healthy battery, and working keyboard will sell quickly, while a banged-up one will struggle to find buyers even at the lower end.

ASUS provides 2-3 years of driver and BIOS updates. Windows 11 will be supported through 2027-2028 on modern Intel/AMD processors. Spare parts are available through ASUS service centres and online, though less widely than Dell or HP parts.

ASUS VivoBook 15 Price by Condition

ConditionPrice RangeWhat It Means
Like New₹26,000 – ₹37,000Under 100 battery cycles, no marks, with box
Good₹18,000 – ₹26,000Under 300 cycles, minor wear, fully functional
Fair₹13,000 – ₹18,000High cycles, worn keyboard, works fine

Ryzen 5/Core i5 models with 16GB RAM hold value best at this tier. SSD-only configurations are preferred. Touch screen adds a modest premium. Use the calculator below.

Key Factors That Affect ASUS VivoBook 15 Resale Value

Processor and RAM define the price tier. A Ryzen 5 with 16GB RAM is the sweet spot. Older Celeron or Pentium models are worth very little in 2026.

SSD vs HDD is a make-or-break factor at this price. An SSD-equipped VivoBook is worth ₹3,000-5,000 more than an identical HDD model — buyers will not tolerate HDD speeds in 2026.

Physical Condition is critical on budget laptops. The VivoBook 15’s plastic chassis shows scratches and discolouration readily. A well-maintained unit stands out sharply from a beat-up one.

Charger and Accessories — include the original charger. VivoBook chargers cost ₹1,500-2,500 to replace.

Display Quality — VivoBook 15 models span from basic TN panels to decent IPS. IPS models sell for more.

Buyer’s Guide — What to Check Before Buying

1. Verify Specs: Run msinfo32 to confirm processor, RAM, and storage. Check the serial number on ASUS support for warranty verification.

2. Check HDD vs SSD: Critical at this price range. If the machine has an HDD, plan for a ₹2,000-3,000 SSD upgrade cost.

3. Battery Health: Run powercfg /batteryreport. The VivoBook 15 typically has a 42-50Wh battery. Budget laptops are more likely to be used on soft surfaces (beds, couches) that block vents and degrade battery faster through heat.

4. Display Panel Test: View the screen from an angle to confirm IPS (good viewing angles) vs TN (washed-out at angles). Run a dead pixel test.

5. Test All Ports and Features: USB-A, USB-C, HDMI, headphone jack. Test the fingerprint sensor if present.

Insider Checks — What IT Pros Look For

THE KEYBOARD SHINE TEST: Tilt under bright light and check the keys. ASUS uses a basic matte coating on VivoBook keys that wears faster than premium laptops. The spacebar and most-used letter keys (E, T, A, S) develop visible shine within a year of daily use. At this price point, some keyboard wear is expected and acceptable — what you are looking for is whether the wear matches the seller’s claims. A “3-month-old” VivoBook with shiny keys is a lie. The VivoBook keyboard is cheaper to replace than premium laptops — ₹1,500-3,000 through third-party repair — but on a ₹22,000 machine, that is still a significant percentage of the total value.

THE BATTERY CYCLE + KEYBOARD CROSS-CHECK: Run powercfg /batteryreport. VivoBooks are frequently student laptops used unplugged in lectures and cafes, so cycle counts can accumulate quickly. If the cycle count seems low but the keyboard and trackpad are worn, check the “Battery capacity history” graph — a sudden jump back to near-design capacity means the battery was replaced. Budget laptop batteries (₹2,000-4,000) degrade faster than premium ones, so replacement is common and not inherently suspicious — but the seller should disclose it.

THE SCREEN COATING CHECK: Display a white background and look from different angles. VivoBook screens have a basic anti-glare coating. Check for uneven wear or streaks. On TN panels, also check for colour shifts and uneven brightness — budget TN panels develop these issues faster than IPS. Screen coating damage is less of a negotiation point on a budget laptop but dead pixels are — run a full-colour dead pixel test.

THE LID HINGE GRAVITY TEST: Open to 45 degrees and release. The VivoBook 15’s hinge is functional but budget-grade. Some play is normal. What you are checking for is a hinge that cannot hold the lid at a stable angle — common on budget laptops after 2-3 years. Listen for clicking or grinding. Hinge repair costs ₹1,500-3,000 but can be challenging because budget laptop chassis parts are more fragile.

THE BOTTOM PANEL FLEX TEST: Press gently on the bottom panel. Budget laptops have thinner plastic panels that flex more. Excessive flex or rattling can indicate missing internal clips or screws from a sloppy reassembly. Check that all screws are present. The VivoBook 15 allows RAM and SSD access through the bottom panel, so it may have been opened for upgrades — this is normal and expected.

THE DISPLAY HALO TEST: Black image, max brightness, dark room. Budget panels have more backlight bleed than premium ones — this is expected. What matters is whether the bleed is so severe it is visible during normal dark-content viewing. On a ₹22,000 laptop, some bleed is acceptable. Bright, localized spots (not general edge glow) may indicate pressure damage. Display replacement costs ₹6,000-10,000 — a large fraction of the laptop’s value.

Seller’s Guide — How to Get Top Price for Your ASUS VivoBook 15

  1. Include battery health data. Few sellers at this price point bother with battery reports — doing so immediately builds credibility.

  2. Mention SSD explicitly. Buyers actively filter for SSD laptops. Put “512GB SSD” in your title.

  3. Clean the machine thoroughly. At this price tier, perceived condition drives buying decisions. A clean VivoBook photographs much better.

  4. Include the charger. Essential for a budget laptop where buyers are cost-conscious about every accessory.

  5. Be honest about the display type. If it is TN, say so. If it is IPS, emphasize it — it is a selling point.

  6. List on Bids44 for competitive offers. Budget laptops sell well on bidding platforms because buyers can start low and compete upward to fair market value.

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