The Amazon Kindle Scribe 2024 is Amazon's second attempt at the "e-reader plus notebook" category that Remarkable invented and Boox refined. The 2024 update added a faster processor, improved Premium Pen feel, and an AI summary feature for notes. At $399 with the included Premium Pen, it sits in the same price tier as Remarkable 2 and Boox Note Air3 C — but with Amazon's Kindle ecosystem baked in.
After 4 weeks of mixed use (reading novels, annotating PDFs, hand-written journaling, meeting notes), here's whether the Scribe finally nails the dual-purpose device.
Reading: still best-in-class for Kindle content
The 10.2-inch Carta 1200 e-ink display at 300 PPI looks identical to a Kindle Oasis or Paperwhite in reading quality. Sharp text, no glare even in direct sunlight, no eye strain after 4-hour reading sessions. Adjustable warm light (orange tint for night reading) and brightness adapt automatically to ambient light.
Page turns: 0.4 seconds average — fast enough that you don't think about it. Slightly slower than the Paperwhite (0.3s) but the larger display makes up for it.
Kindle ecosystem access is complete: your existing Kindle library appears immediately on first sign-in. Whispersync continues your reading position across devices. Amazon's recommendations engine pushes Prime Reading and Kindle Unlimited content. For Kindle-store readers, the Scribe is the best Kindle you can buy on the market.
Writing: meaningful improvements over Scribe 1st gen
The Premium Pen (included with Scribe 2024) writes with 22ms latency — significantly improved from the 1st gen's 37ms. In side-by-side testing against the Remarkable 2 (the gold standard for e-ink writing feel), the Scribe 2024 is now within 5-7ms — the gap is barely perceptible to casual writers.
Friction on the screen surface is good. Not as paper-like as the Remarkable 2's textured display, but better than the smooth Boox glass. For handwriting and quick sketches it feels acceptable; for precision drawing the Remarkable still wins.
Palm rejection works reliably. Hand placement on the screen while writing is automatically ignored. The Premium Pen has tilt sensitivity, eraser tip on the back, and a customizable shortcut button on the side.
Note-taking software
Amazon's notebook app has matured significantly. You can:
- Create unlimited notebooks with various templates (blank, lined, dot grid, plain music staff, planner pages)
- Add notes directly into purchased Kindle books (notes appear in margins; export to email)
- Annotate PDFs sent via Send to Kindle
- Use Active Canvas to insert sketches into existing Kindle text
- Convert handwriting to text (Latin alphabet only; Arabic/Chinese not supported)
The 2024 AI Summary feature creates short bullet-point summaries of long handwritten notes. Surprisingly useful for meeting notes — turn a 4-page handwritten meeting into a 6-bullet summary email in 5 seconds.
What's still missing: voice recording (Remarkable has this), cross-device syncing notes to a phone app for review (Remarkable has this), and a proper folder/tag organization system. Notes live in flat lists per notebook with no nested structure.
PDF and document handling
Send to Kindle for documents (PDF, Word, EPUB) works as expected. Annotated PDFs export to email as the original PDF plus a separate annotations PDF — workable but not as integrated as Remarkable's "annotated PDF" single-file export.
For academic researchers and professionals who annotate PDFs constantly, Remarkable's PDF workflow is still better. For occasional annotation, the Scribe is sufficient.
Battery life
Amazon claims 12 weeks of reading or 3 weeks of writing per charge. Our real-world test: 8 weeks with 30-45 minutes daily reading, occasional notes. Charging via USB-C in roughly 3 hours.
This is excellent — comparable to or better than Remarkable 2 (1-2 weeks heavy writing use) and dramatically better than any LCD tablet.
- Remarkable 2 has a more paper-like writing surface (textured display, better friction)
- Remarkable 2 has better folder organization for notes
- Remarkable 2 has a companion phone/desktop app for note review
- Remarkable 2 has voice recording
What you give up versus Kindle Scribe:
- Kindle library and ecosystem (Remarkable doesn't sync with Amazon Kindle store)
- Kindle store purchases (over 12 million titles)
- Whispersync across devices
- Adjustable warm light (Remarkable is white-only)
If your primary use is reading + occasional notes: Kindle Scribe wins. If your primary use is heavy note-taking + occasional reading: Remarkable 2 wins.
How it scores in our system
In our e-reader leaderboard, the Kindle Scribe 2024 is the top score for hybrid reading+writing use. The pure-writing tier is led by Remarkable 2; the pure-reading tier is led by the Paperwhite Signature Edition.
Verdict
Buy the Kindle Scribe 2024 if: you have a substantial Kindle library, you want both reading and occasional note-taking in one device, you want the best Kindle ecosystem integration, you read in low light frequently (warm light feature), or you specifically want PDF annotation with email export.
Skip it if: note-taking is your primary use (Remarkable 2 is still the better notebook), you're not in the Kindle ecosystem (the Scribe's reading advantage doesn't apply), or you want true desktop sync for notes (the Scribe app is Kindle-app-extension only).
For Kindle-ecosystem readers who want one device, the Scribe is the right buy in 2026.