Lenovo has lifted the curtain on its new ThinkVision P40WD-40, a curved ultrawide monitor aimed at professionals after more screen real estate and advanced connectivity.
The 39.7-inch IPS Black display offers a sharp 5120 x 2160 resolution in a 21:9 aspect ratio, covering 98% of the DCI-P3 colour gamut.
With a 2500R curve and enhanced contrast via IPS Black technology, Lenovo is pitching it as equally suited to creative workflows, multitasking and entertainment.
Connectivity is a big selling point.
The monitor includes HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort 1.4 in/out, two USB-C 3.2 Gen 1 ports, five USB-A ports, and a 2.5GbE Ethernet port.
It supports Thunderbolt 4 both upstream and downstream, enabling daisy-chaining and up to 140W USB Power Delivery to laptops.
Lenovo’s eKVM feature and integrated networking enable users to access power, Ethernet, and peripherals through a single cable.

The P40WD-40 also debuts Lenovo’s DisplayPort Power Saving with panel replay, dynamically adjusting refresh rates while maintaining image quality.
It’s the first desktop monitor to support a 24Hz–120Hz variable refresh rate. Lenovo claims energy consumption is up to 34% below Energy Star 8.0 requirements.
On the ergonomics front, the ThinkVision P40WD-40 offers a wide range of adjustments, including 155mm of height travel, ±45° swivel and a tilt range of +23.5 to −5 degrees.
The panel also carries TÜV Rheinland hardware-level low blue light certification.
It has been awarded both Eye Comfort 5-Star and TCO 10 certifications.
As with the rest of the AI-powered portfolio unveiled at IFA, the new Lenovo monitor is part of the broader corporate strategy Channel News has been reporting on.
That is, building smarter, more connected devices that anchor Lenovo’s push to lead in AI-first computing.
The ThinkVision P40WD-40 should be available in November.




























