Buying a Microsoft Surface Pro tablet without a pen or keyboard is like buying a Mercedes without wheels. The engine runs just fine, and the seats are as luxurious as you could imagine. But wouldnât you feel cheated if you couldnât go anywhere?
Most of the 16 iterations of the Surface Pro adopt the same double standard: the Surface Pro is a laptop, except when Microsoft starts talking price. Then, poof! Itâs a tablet. Only as you move step by step through the buying process does Microsoft reveal that, yes, the pen and keyboard â and now the charger! â all cost extra. Ridiculous.
Unfortunately, weâve come to accept this behavior. Microsoft seems to think that after deciding upon a $2,000 Surface laptop, you might shrug your shoulders and accept a few hundred dollars more. Why not? Youâre already hooked.
But Microsoftâs new 12-inch, $799 Surface Pro changes things. Weâre not talking about a premium device. Instead, Microsoftâs Surface Pro page walks you through the experience: typing, inking, doing everything a clamshell laptop can do â all with the pen and keyboard shown prominently throughout. And if you want a charger? All those extras total over $300, which on a $799 device feels insane, sleazy, and borderline illegal.
Foundry
Visually, the Surface Pro keyboard and pen are everywhere
On Microsoftâs Surface Pro page, the top illustration shows two Surface Pros, each with a keyboard and pen. Scroll down: Yep, thereâs another. Keep going and youâll see more photos of Microsoftâs Surface Pro with a keyboard and/or a pen than as a stand-alone tablet.
At no time do I see any indication that the keyboard or pen are optional. The language implies that theyâre all part of the same holistic solution.

Foundry
âReimagined with a smooth-matte palm rest, sturdy wedge design, and dynamic hinge, Surface Pro is great for typing anywhere, even on your lap,â Microsoft says.
Underneath a description of the âincredible typing experience,â Microsoft says: âWork anywhere with better typing and 360° rotation. The new 12-inch Surface Pro is durable, easy to clean, and ideal for travel or the coffee shop.â
Sounds great. How much is it? âStarting from $799.99,â Microsoft says.

Foundry
Buying a Surface Pro means selecting a size, configuration, and color. Itâs here that you first learn that no, no charger is included. Thatâs $70 extra. (Microsoftâs lawyers may hold up their hands and say that the first photo you see on the 12-inch Surface Pro page is of just the tablet itself. But at the bottom of the column of images is, yes, a Surface Pro with a keyboard and pen attached.)
On the second page? Time to buy a Microsoft 365 subscription. Only on the third page do you learn that a keyboard is $150, and a keyboard and pen bundled together is $250. Then itâs time to check out, feeling at least a little irritated that Microsoft didnât tell you about all of this at the beginning.

Foundry
Does this feel fair to you?
It just feels like Microsoft is trying to have it both ways. Every laptop ships with an integrated keyboard. Microsoftâs Surface Pro is advertised on Microsoftâs page as having âtablet-to-laptop flexibility,â whatever that means. Visually, Microsoft is telling you: Yes, youâll want a keyboard and pen.
Then thereâs the name. Should Microsoft refer to these as âProâ tablets, without the accessories that professionals use? I donât think so. Calling just the tablet a âSurface,â with an upgrade to a âSurface Proâ that adds a pen and keyboard, feels closer to what the reality should be.
Even the Trump Administration â which most Americans would consider âbusiness friendlyâ â has actually implemented a new FTC rule prohibiting bait-and-switch pricing. Thatâs predicated upon an executive order, signed by Trump himself.

Mattias Inghe
As the FTC puts it: â[the order] requires that businesses that advertise prices tell consumers the whole truth up-front about total prices and fees.â
A supplementary page describes how the order protects general âbusiness-to-business transactionsâ beyond just tickets and short-term lodging. To me, tacking on additional charges for a pen and keyboard feels like a hotelâs $100 daily âresort fee,â or the discovery that youâll have to pay extra for an airline meal or to pick your seat. Nothing about any of this feels âup front.â
The point isnât that Microsoft is actually violating FTC regulations. But the company is certainly pushing up against the bounds of good behavior.
Just not acceptable in a low- to mid-range device
To be fair, other Windows tablets donât consistently include their accessories, either. Lenovoâs ThinkPad X12 Gen 2 bundles the keyboard and pen. Dellâs Latitude 7350 Detachable does not. The Asus ProArt PZ13 includes a a keyboard, but no pen. Heck, many all-in-one desktops toss in a mouse and keyboard.

But give Dell credit: its Latitude 7350 Detachable product page doesnât even show a keyboard, which it calls âoptional.â That feels more like an honest sale.
Microsoftâs stance feels especially pernicious because there are already extra back-end tariff fees tacked on to the purchase price â or not, depending upon the whims of the President. You still really donât know under what tariff regulation anything you buy will fall under, which already makes consumers cautious. Thatâs what makes a $799 Surface Pro appealing. Finally, a reasonable price tag!
Only itâs not. When you add up all of the additional âoptionsâ â a $69.99 charger, plus $250 for a bundled keyboard and pen â thatâs an additional $319.99 surcharge, or 40 percent of the purchase price right there. And thatâs even without the $129.99 per year that Microsoft charges for a Microsoft 365 Family subscription.
Thatâs outrageous, unfair, and maybe illegal. This isnât nickel-and-diming you. Thatâs a big fat pile of money that could be put toward other things.
You would think that Microsoft would at least explain its actions. So far, my questions have been ignored. I donât think they should be ignored. I think Microsoftâs Surface Pro pricing strategy should be explained, reconsidered, and ultimately changed.

