The Lenovo Legion 5 Pro earned its following the hard way: by quietly out-specifying laptops that cost a fair bit more. Its calling card is that tall 16-inch screen, a proper cooling system, and a no-nonsense build that takes punishment. New, it was always sensibly priced for what it was. Bought refurbished in Australia, that same well-engineered machine becomes one of the smartest gaming-laptop buys you can make.
The numbers that change the conversation
Top refurbished lenovo legion 5 pro gaming laptops on eBay right now
Here is what is actually listed today, pulled live so you can line up GPU tier, RAM, screen and condition side by side before you commit.
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Why second-hand is not “second best”
The Legion 5 Pro was built to be a workhorse, and a workhorse does not stop being one because it changed owners. The 16-inch 16:10 QHD+ display, the Legion ColdFront cooling with its dual fans and heat-pipe array, the metal-and-polymer chassis, the full-size keyboard with its generous travel – all of that is exactly the same on a two-year-old unit as it was on day one. The 16:10 panel still gives you that extra vertical room for browsers, spreadsheets and timelines that a flat 16:9 screen never did, and the high-refresh QHD+ resolution still looks sharp and fast.
There is a buyer’s quirk that works in your favour, too. The Legion line sold heavily to people who chose it on value – students, developers, and gamers who read the spec sheets rather than the marketing. That tends to mean machines that were treated as tools and kept updated through Lenovo Vantage, not abused. A refurbished Legion 5 Pro from a decent seller usually arrives factory-reset, cleaned out, with the battery checked and often a fresh thermal service – the things that actually decide how a hard-working gaming laptop performs years in.
The Legion 5 Pro never relied on being the most expensive laptop in the room. Buying it used just sharpens the one thing it was already best at: value.
The savings are real
Even new, the Legion 5 Pro tended to undercut rivals carrying the same NVIDIA GeForce RTX silicon. Take that already-keen pricing into the second-hand market and the discount compounds. Because Lenovo refreshes the Legion range each year, a model that is one or two generations back regularly lands in that 20-60% cheaper bracket while still pushing well past anything you would buy new at the same outlay. You are not stepping down to a slower machine – you are picking up the same generously cooled, full-power laptop after its first owner absorbed the new-release premium.
New vs used, side by side
| Brand new | Used / refurbished | |
|---|---|---|
| Price for an RTX-class Legion 5 Pro | Full current pricing | Roughly 20-60% less |
| Gaming & creator performance | Latest CPU/GPU | A step back, still hits well above its price |
| Battery cycles | Zero | Some – ask for the cycle count |
| RAM & SSD upgrades | Whatever the base config ships | Often already bumped via the two SODIMM/M.2 slots |
| Carbon footprint | Full manufacturing cost | Re-uses ~80% already spent |
| Warranty | Full Lenovo warranty | Seller warranty + Consumer Law |
The five-minute checklist before you pay
- Pin down the exact GPU and its wattage. The Legion 5 Pro shipped with a range of GeForce RTX chips, and Lenovo ran them at a healthy power limit – which is half the point of buying one. Ask for the full RTX label, the model year, and ideally the total graphics power, not just “RTX”.
- Confirm it is the Pro, not the standard Legion 5. The “Pro” brings the taller 16-inch QHD+ 16:10 panel and the beefier cooling. Listings sometimes blur the two – check the screen size and resolution match the Pro.
- Ask for the battery cycle count. These ship with a large battery, but heavy gaming on mains plus years of charging still wears the cell. A sensible cycle count and healthy capacity tell you how it has aged.
- Check the ColdFront vents and fans. The cooling is this laptop’s strength only when it is clean. Ask whether it has had a recent dust-out or repaste, and how it behaves under load – constant fan roar or thermal throttling points to clogged vents or dried paste.
- Test the screen and ports. Look for backlight bleed, dead pixels or uneven brightness on that QHD+ panel, and confirm the USB-C with display/charging, HDMI, and the rear ports all work.
- Get clear photos of the keyboard deck and lid corners. Shine on WASD shows heavy gaming hours, and knocked lid corners or a loose hinge reveal how the machine was carried.
You have more protection than you think
When you buy from a business in Australia – an eBay store, a refurbisher, a retailer – the Australian Consumer Law travels with the laptop whether the seller mentions it or not. The Legion 5 Pro must be of acceptable quality, match its description, and be fit for the purpose you bought it for. Those consumer guarantees sit on top of any warranty the seller offers, and they cannot be waived. If a “refurbished” Legion arrives throttling under load, with a swollen battery, or simply not as described, you have a clear right to a repair, replacement or refund. Pay with a method that leaves a paper trail and keep the listing and your messages.
Ready to find yours?
Browse current refurbished and used Legion 5 Pro deals from trusted sellers below.
Red flags to walk away from
- “Legion gaming laptop” with no Pro confirmation or screen spec. If the listing dodges the 16-inch QHD+ panel, you may be looking at the cheaper standard Legion 5 dressed up as a Pro.
- No GPU wattage or model year. The whole reason to buy this laptop is the high-power RTX configuration; vagueness usually hides a lower-tier or power-limited variant.
- Silence on battery health on a machine that often did long sessions plugged in – ask, and be wary if they won’t say.
- Photos that never show it running in Windows, or that carefully avoid the screen, hinge and underside vents.
- A price far below every comparable listing. A Legion 5 Pro priced like a budget laptop is either faulty, the wrong configuration, or not actually a Pro.
Frequently asked questions
Is a refurbished Legion 5 Pro fast enough for current games? Yes. Even a one or two generation old unit pairs a capable Ryzen or Intel CPU with a full-power GeForce RTX GPU, and the QHD+ 16:10 panel was made to drive games at 1440p with refresh to spare.
Can I upgrade the RAM and storage myself? Generally yes – the Legion 5 Pro uses two replaceable SODIMM memory slots and M.2 SSD storage, so it is one of the more upgrade-friendly gaming laptops. Many used units already have RAM or an extra SSD added, so check the current config before paying to redo work that is done.
Does that big screen and powerful GPU kill the battery life? On battery it is a gaming laptop, not an ultrabook – expect modest endurance under load. For everyday tasks the hybrid graphics and Lenovo’s power modes stretch it further, but plan to game on mains.
Is the cooling reliable second-hand? The ColdFront system is one of this laptop’s best features and ages well when kept clean. A refurbished unit that has had a dust-out and fresh thermal paste runs cool and quiet; ask the seller whether that service was done.
The bottom line
The Lenovo Legion 5 Pro built its reputation on giving you flagship-grade gaming hardware without the flagship price – a tall, sharp 16-inch screen, a full-power RTX GPU, serious cooling, and a chassis you can rely on. Buy it refurbished in Australia and that value proposition only gets stronger: you keep all the engineering, shed 20-60% of the cost, re-use the roughly 80% of carbon already spent making it, and keep a capable machine out of the e-waste stream. Confirm it is genuinely the Pro, check the GPU wattage, battery and thermals, buy from a seller covered by the Australian Consumer Law, and you walk away with one of the best value gaming laptops going – at a price that finally matches how sensible a choice it always was.
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