The HP Omen 15 was built to push frames, not budgets. That tension is exactly why the refurbished market suits it so well: a machine engineered with a discrete GeForce GPU, a high-refresh display and a metal-and-plastic chassis that was never cheap to begin with becomes genuinely affordable once it has been someone else’s pride for a year or two. If you want real 1080p gaming in Australia without paying brand-new money for last season’s silicon, a refurbished Omen 15 deserves a hard look.
The numbers that change the conversation
Top refurbished hp omen 15 gaming laptops on eBay right now
Here are current listings pulled live, so you can compare configurations, conditions and prices in one place before you commit.
Listings update automatically and open in a new tab.
Why second-hand is not “second best”
A gaming laptop ages differently to a phone. The Omen 15’s headline parts — its GeForce GTX or RTX GPU, its Intel Core or Ryzen CPU, and that fast IPS panel — were over-specified for the games of their day, which means they still chew through esports titles and most AAA games at sensible settings years later. The components that genuinely wear out, like the battery, the thermal paste and the fans, are the cheap, replaceable ones. A well-prepared refurbished Omen 15 has usually had exactly those touched up.
There is also a quiet advantage specific to this line: HP shipped the Omen 15 in enormous volume to students and creators, so the second-hand pool is deep. Deep supply means you are not forced to overpay for the one unit in the country — you can hold out for the configuration and condition you actually want.
The silicon that drives your frame rate barely degrades with age. What ages is the battery and the dust in the fans — and both are fixable for the price of a couple of games.
The savings are real
New gaming laptops carry a premium that has little to do with raw performance and everything to do with being the latest box on the shelf. Step back one or two GPU generations and the discount is dramatic while the playable experience barely moves for 1080p gaming. On a refurbished Omen 15 you are typically looking at 20-60% off a comparable new machine. Put differently: the money you save can buy a proper external monitor, a mechanical keyboard and a year of game passes, and you would still be ahead. That is before you count the environmental maths — choosing a used unit sidesteps the roughly 80% of a laptop’s lifetime emissions locked up in manufacturing a brand-new one.
New vs used, side by side
| Brand new | Used / refurbished | |
|---|---|---|
| Price for similar gaming performance | Full retail premium | Roughly 20-60% less |
| GPU generation | Newest, costs the most | One or two back, still strong at 1080p |
| Battery condition | As new | Worn, but cheaply replaceable |
| Upgrade headroom (RAM / SSD) | Open | Open — Omen 15 panels lift off easily |
| Environmental footprint | New manufacturing emissions | Largely avoided |
| Warranty | Full manufacturer | Seller / ACL, varies — check first |
The five-minute checklist before you pay
- Confirm the exact GPU. “Omen 15” spans several years. Ask whether it is a GTX 1660 Ti, RTX 2060, RTX 3060 or similar — that single chip decides your real frame rates more than anything else.
- Check the panel refresh rate. Omen 15 shipped in 60Hz, 144Hz and 240Hz variants. If smooth motion matters to you, a 60Hz unit at a 144Hz price is a poor deal.
- Ask about battery health and cycle count. A swollen or near-dead battery is common on hard-used gaming units and is the single most useful thing to confirm.
- Look for fan and thermal honesty. Ask whether the fans have been cleaned and the thermal paste refreshed. Loud fans or thermal throttling usually mean neither has.
- Verify RAM and storage as configured. The Omen 15 is easy to open, so used units are often already upgraded — confirm what is actually inside rather than the original spec.
- Get clear photos of the lid, hinges and keyboard. The WASD cluster and the hinge area show the most honest wear on a gaming laptop.
You have more protection than you think
Buying in Australia carries real weight. When you purchase from a business — a refurbisher, a retailer or a commercial seller — the Australian Consumer Law applies regardless of any “sold as is” wording. Goods must be of acceptable quality, match their description and be fit for purpose. A refurbished Omen 15 advertised as working that arrives with a dead GPU or a fault the seller knew about is your problem to return, not yours to absorb. Keep the listing screenshot and all messages; they are your evidence if a remedy is ever needed.
Ready to find yours?
Browse current refurbished and used HP Omen 15 deals from trusted sellers and compare them side by side.
Red flags to walk away from
- “Boots fine” with no gaming proof. A gaming laptop that has never been shown running a game under load is hiding something — usually heat or a flaky GPU.
- Vague model wording. “HP Omen gaming laptop” without a generation or GPU named is a listing written to obscure an older, weaker unit.
- No mention of the charger. The Omen 15 uses a high-wattage barrel charger; a third-party underpowered replacement will throttle performance.
- Cracked hinge or lifting bezel. Hinge damage on this chassis tends to worsen and can pull the display cable — treat it as a hard no.
- Refusal to share battery or temperature details. Sellers who dodge these specific questions are usually the ones with the worst answers.
Frequently asked questions
Can a refurbished Omen 15 still run modern games? Yes. At 1080p, the RTX-equipped versions handle current AAA titles at medium-to-high settings, and esports games like CS2 or Valorant run very comfortably. The older GTX models remain strong for esports and slightly older AAA games.
Is the battery a deal-breaker if it is worn? Not usually. Gaming laptops live on the charger anyway, and Omen 15 batteries are a straightforward replacement. Factor a modest battery cost into your budget and a worn one becomes a bargaining point rather than a reason to walk.
Can I upgrade the RAM and storage myself? Generally yes. The Omen 15 bottom panel removes with standard screws and exposes the SO-DIMM slots and M.2 SSD, making memory and storage upgrades some of the easiest you can do on a laptop.
How do I know which generation I am buying? The GPU and CPU named in the listing are your guide. Ask the seller to confirm both, and if they will not, assume it is the older, cheaper configuration and price accordingly.
The bottom line
The Omen 15 was a lot of laptop when it was new, and the parts that made it good — the GPU, the CPU and the high-refresh panel — are precisely the parts that hold their value in use. Buy one refurbished, confirm the GPU and the panel, check the battery and the fans, and lean on your consumer rights, and you walk away with a capable 1080p gaming machine for a fraction of new-money. That is a smart purchase by every measure that matters: performance, price and the planet.
This article may contain affiliate links; see our Affiliate Disclosure.