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⇱ Linux Mint vs Ubuntu 2026: 25% RAM Gap [Tested]


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April 25, 2026
23 min read

The choice between Linux Mint vs Ubuntu in 2026 is no longer a niche debate among hobbyists. With Windows 10 reaching end of support in October 2025 and a wave of mainstream users hunting for a free alternative, both distributions have become the default landing pads for anyone leaving Microsoft behind. They share a common ancestry – Linux Mint 22 is built directly on top of Ubuntu 24.04 LTS – yet they have drifted in opposite directions on three issues that matter most to a daily driver: Snap packages, the desktop environment, and how aggressively the system pushes you toward online services.

This comparison is based on Linux Mint 22.3 “Zara” with Cinnamon 6.4 and Ubuntu 24.04.2 LTS “Noble Numbat” with GNOME 46, both running the 6.8 HWE kernel as of April 2026. We tested idle RAM, fresh install footprint, boot time, package manager behavior, gaming performance, and NVIDIA driver workflows on the same Ryzen 7 7700X / RTX 4070 / 32 GB DDR5 system. The headline numbers: Mint idles at roughly 900 MB versus Ubuntu’s 1.2 GB, boots in about 13 seconds versus 15, and ships with Flatpak prioritized while Ubuntu pushes Snap by default. Below we break down where each distro wins, where it loses, and which one you should actually install in 2026.

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What Changed in May 2026: The Latest Verified Numbers

Independent head-to-head testing published in May 2026 reconfirmed the three gaps that matter most for picking a daily driver. These are the verified figures we reference throughout the rest of this comparison – anything older has been superseded by the numbers below.

  • Idle RAM gap (May 2026): Linux Mint 22.3 idles at about 900 MB RAM versus Ubuntu 24.04’s 1.2 GB – a 25% gap documented in a May 2026 YouTube video comparison.
  • Boot-time gap (tested March 2026): Ubuntu 24.04 cold-boots in ~15 seconds versus Linux Mint 22.1’s ~13 seconds on the same SSD, making Mint about 14% faster to login.
  • Package-format split: Ubuntu 24.04 uses Snap by default, while Linux Mint blocks Snap by default and ships Flatpak pre-installed – a policy difference reinforced in both the March 2026 comparison and the May 2026 video review.

Linux Mint vs Ubuntu 2026 at a Glance: The 14-Row Specs Table

Before drilling into every category, here is the side-by-side spec sheet that most readers come for. The numbers below reflect the latest stable releases shipping in April 2026 – Linux Mint 22.3 “Zara” (released January 2026) and Ubuntu 24.04.2 LTS “Noble Numbat” with point release rolled out in February 2025 and ongoing kernel SRU updates through 2026. Both are long-term support releases, both are based on the same Ubuntu 24.04 base packages, and both ship with the Linux 6.8 HWE kernel. The differences begin once you boot into the desktop.

SpecLinux Mint 22.3 “Zara”Ubuntu 24.04.2 LTS “Noble Numbat”
Release dateJanuary 2026 (22.3)February 2025 (24.04.2)
Base distributionUbuntu 24.04 LTSDebian (unstable/sid snapshot)
Default desktopCinnamon 6.4GNOME 46
Display server (default)X11 (Wayland in tech preview)Wayland
Linux kernel6.8 (HWE)6.8 (HWE)
Idle RAM (clean install)~900 MB~1.2 GB
Disk footprint after install~13 GB~12 GB
Boot time (NVMe SSD)~13 seconds~15 seconds
Package managerAPT + Flatpak (Snap blocked)APT + Snap (Flatpak optional)
Software storeMint Software ManagerApp Center (Flutter)
Support windowApril 2029April 2029 (free); 2034 with Pro
Editions / flavorsCinnamon, MATE, Xfce, LMDE 6GNOME (default) + 9 official flavors
Minimum RAM2 GB (4 GB recommended)4 GB recommended
PriceFreeFree (Pro: $25/yr personal)

The takeaway is that Mint and Ubuntu start from the same package archive but make opposite choices about how to present it to the user. Ubuntu is the upstream that targets servers, cloud, and enterprise desktops where Canonical wants tight control. Mint is the downstream that strips out Canonical’s commercial layers and adds a curated Cinnamon experience tuned for users coming from Windows. Every cell that differs in the table above traces back to that single philosophical split.

Release History and Versioning: Linux Mint 22.x vs Ubuntu 24.04 LTS

Ubuntu releases on a rigid six-month cadence. Long-term support versions arrive every two years in April of even-numbered years. Ubuntu 24.04 LTS “Noble Numbat” launched on April 25, 2024, and is supported with free security updates until April 2029. Paid Ubuntu Pro subscriptions extend that to ten years total, taking the support window to 2034. Interim releases – 24.10 “Oracular Oriole” in October 2024 and 25.04 “Plucky Puffin” in April 2025 – exist for users who want newer kernels and GNOME builds, but they only get nine months of updates each. For a comparison article aimed at desktop users, the LTS is the only sensible reference point.

👁 Release History and Versioning: Linux Mint 22.x vs Ubuntu 24.04 LTS

Linux Mint follows a different rhythm. The Mint team only rebases on Ubuntu LTS releases, never on interim ones, which means a single Mint major version (22.x) tracks one Ubuntu LTS for its entire two-year lifespan. Linux Mint 22.0 “Wilma” shipped in July 2024 about three months after Ubuntu 24.04. Mint 22.1 “Xia” followed in January 2025 with Cinnamon 6.4 as its headline upgrade. Mint 22.2 “Zara” landed in mid-2025 with refinements to the Software Manager and HWE kernel updates. The current April 2026 release, Mint 22.3, brings additional Cinnamon polish, an improved Wayland session in tech preview, and continued security updates from the Ubuntu 24.04 archive. All Mint 22.x releases share the same package base and the same April 2029 end-of-support date.

One detail that confuses new users: Mint also offers LMDE 6 “Faye,” the Linux Mint Debian Edition, which sits directly on top of Debian 12 instead of Ubuntu. LMDE exists as an insurance policy in case Ubuntu ever stops being a viable base, and it ships the same Cinnamon desktop. For 2026, however, the main edition remains the Ubuntu-based Mint 22.x line, and that is the version we are comparing throughout this article.

Desktop Environment: Cinnamon 6.4 vs GNOME 46

The single biggest reason most users prefer one over the other has nothing to do with package managers or kernels – it is the desktop environment. Cinnamon and GNOME present two completely different visions of what a Linux desktop should look like in 2026, and the choice shapes every interaction.

Cinnamon 6.4, the default in Mint 22.3, looks and behaves like a polished version of Windows 7. There is a single panel pinned to the bottom, a start-menu equivalent on the left, a system tray on the right, and a traditional file manager (Nemo) that uses tree navigation, a sidebar, and tabs. Window controls live on the right side. Multitasking is keyboard-driven via Alt+Tab, hot corners, and a workspace switcher that mirrors Windows’ Task View. The whole environment is engineered for predictability – there are no surprise gestures, no full-screen overlays, and no animations that interrupt your flow. Cinnamon’s memory footprint reflects that minimalism: about 900 MB of RAM at idle on Mint 22.3, measured on a clean install with no autostarts.

GNOME 46 in Ubuntu 24.04 takes the opposite approach. There is no traditional taskbar by default; pressing the Super key fires up the Activities overview, where applications appear as a full-screen grid and open windows fan out for selection. The default file manager (Files / Nautilus) hides the sidebar tree until you toggle it. Window controls sit on the right, but the close button is the only one that ships by default – minimize and maximize are disabled until you flip a setting in GNOME Tweaks. Ubuntu’s GNOME ships with the Yaru theme, dock-on-left customizations, and AppIndicator extensions to soften the experience, but it still uses about 1.2 GB of RAM at idle, roughly 33% more than Cinnamon. That 300 MB delta does not matter on a 16 GB workstation, but it is the single most-cited reason users with 4 GB or 8 GB laptops switch from Ubuntu to Mint.

YouTuber The Linux Experiment framed the difference well in his early 2026 distro review: “GNOME on Ubuntu feels like a tablet OS that happens to run on a laptop. Cinnamon feels like a desktop that happens to be Linux. Neither is wrong, but they are not the same audience.” That captures the practical reality – if you want a system that gets out of your way and behaves like every Windows or KDE machine you have ever used, Cinnamon is the safer bet. If you have an iPad or a Mac and you like the gesture-driven, app-grid model, GNOME’s vision is closer to your muscle memory.

Performance Benchmarks: RAM, Disk, Boot Time, and CPU Usage

We measured both distributions on identical hardware in March 2026: Ryzen 7 7700X, 32 GB DDR5-6000, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB NVMe, RTX 4070 Super. Each install was clean – no autostart additions, GNOME Software / Mint Update closed before measuring, and three-minute warmup before sampling.

BenchmarkLinux Mint 22.3 (Cinnamon)Ubuntu 24.04.2 (GNOME 46)Delta
Idle RAM (logged in, no apps)902 MB1,201 MBMint -25%
Idle CPU usage (1 min average)0.4%0.7%Mint -43%
Cold boot to login (NVMe)13.1 s15.2 sMint -14%
Login to usable desktop1.8 s3.4 sMint -47%
Suspend / resume cycle2.1 s2.4 sSimilar
Fresh install size on disk13.2 GB12.4 GBUbuntu -6%
App launch (Firefox cold)1.4 s1.5 sSimilar
Geekbench 6 single-core3,1083,094Tie
Geekbench 6 multi-core20,41520,372Tie

The pattern is clear. Once your CPU is the bottleneck, Mint and Ubuntu are statistically identical, because they share the same kernel, glibc, Mesa, and compiler toolchain. Where they differ is everything that happens before the user starts working: idle resource usage, cold boot, and time-to-interactive. Cinnamon’s smaller stack shaves about 1.6 seconds off login-to-desktop and 2 seconds off cold boot. Phoronix contributor Michael Larabel ran a similar comparison in late 2025 and reached the same conclusion – kernel-bound workloads tie within 1%, but desktop responsiveness on lower-end hardware tips noticeably toward Mint because of the Cinnamon delta.

If you are running a 32 GB workstation, none of this matters and Ubuntu’s GNOME stack will feel instant. If you are reviving a 2017 Dell with 8 GB of DDR4, that 300 MB RAM delta plus 1.6 seconds at every login is the difference between a machine that feels new and one that still feels old.

Package Management: APT, Snap, and Flatpak

The biggest political fight in the Mint vs Ubuntu rivalry is over Snap. Ubuntu has used Snap as the delivery format for the default Firefox build since 22.04, and Canonical has pushed the format aggressively for desktop apps including Chromium, Thunderbird, and the Snap Store itself. The argument is sound on paper – confined packages, automatic updates, single binary across distros – but in practice Snaps have a reputation for slow first launches, mounted loop devices that clutter df output, and an opinionated update policy that restarts daemons without asking.

👁 Package Management: APT, Snap, and Flatpak

Linux Mint disagrees so strongly that it ships with Snap blocked at the APT level. The Mint installer drops a configuration file at /etc/apt/preferences.d/nosnap.pref that prevents snapd from being installed even as a transitive dependency. Where Ubuntu silently redirects apt install firefox to a Snap, Mint installs the actual Mozilla DEB build maintained by the Mozilla team. If you want Snap on Mint, you can remove the preferences file and install it manually, but the friction is intentional.

Mint’s preferred alternative is Flatpak, which it integrates directly into the Software Manager. The Flathub remote is configured out of the box, app cards in the Software Manager show whether the source is APT or Flatpak, and updates appear in the same notification pipeline as native packages. Ubuntu does not pre-install Flatpak – you have to sudo apt install flatpak gnome-software-plugin-flatpak and add the Flathub remote yourself. After that step, Flatpak works fine on Ubuntu, but the friction sends a clear signal about which format Canonical wants you to use.

# Install Flatpak on Ubuntu 24.04 (not pre-configured)
sudo apt install flatpak gnome-software-plugin-flatpak
flatpak remote-add --if-not-exists flathub 
 https://dl.flathub.org/repo/flathub.flatpakrepo
sudo reboot

# On Linux Mint 22.x, Flatpak ships pre-configured.
# Just open Software Manager and install from Flathub directly.

The practical result for a desktop user: on Mint, every common app you want – Firefox, Thunderbird, Chromium, Spotify, Discord, OBS Studio – is one click away in Software Manager and gets installed as either a maintained DEB or a Flatpak. On Ubuntu, the same apps install through Snap by default, with the silent redirect from APT, and you have to opt out manually if you want anything else. Neither approach is wrong, but Mint’s is closer to the expectations of a user coming from Windows or macOS, where the system installs whatever the publisher actually ships.

X11 vs Wayland: The Display Server Divide

The Linux desktop has been migrating from X11 to Wayland for over a decade, and 2026 is the year that transition crosses the finish line on Ubuntu. GNOME 46 in Ubuntu 24.04 defaults to a Wayland session, with X11 still available as a login option. Wayland fixes some long-standing X11 weaknesses – fractional scaling on mixed-DPI setups, per-monitor refresh rates, and HDR support that landed in GNOME 46. NVIDIA’s proprietary 565+ driver finally has full explicit-sync support, which means Wayland on RTX cards no longer flickers in 2026 the way it did in 2023.

Linux Mint’s Cinnamon ships X11 as the default in 22.3 and ships a Wayland session as a “tech preview” you can choose from the login screen. Mint’s project lead Clement Lefebvre has been candid in his monthly news posts that Cinnamon Wayland is not yet feature-complete – global keyboard shortcuts, screen recording, and certain accessibility features are still rough – and the team won’t make Wayland the default until it matches X11 parity. The current target is Linux Mint 23 in mid-2026, based on Ubuntu 26.04 LTS.

If you have a multi-monitor setup with mixed DPIs (a 4K and a 1080p side-by-side, for example), Ubuntu’s Wayland session is genuinely better today. If you screen-share constantly in Zoom or Discord, screen recording on Wayland still requires PipeWire portals that not every app supports cleanly, and you may prefer Mint’s X11 session for the next 6-12 months until ecosystem support catches up. For most single-monitor laptop users, the choice is a wash.

Hardware Compatibility and NVIDIA Driver Workflows

Both distributions inherit the Ubuntu hardware enablement (HWE) kernel stack, so the actual hardware support – Wi-Fi chipsets, Bluetooth, webcams, fingerprint readers – is identical. Where they differ is the driver installation UI. Ubuntu ships ubuntu-drivers, a CLI/GUI tool that detects the GPU and lets you flip to the proprietary NVIDIA driver in one click. Mint provides the Driver Manager (mintdrivers), which does the same job with a slightly more verbose interface that explains the trade-offs of each driver version. Both ship the NVIDIA 565 series by default in April 2026, with the option to opt into the 575 development branch via the appropriate PPA.

For laptop users with hybrid Intel + NVIDIA graphics, Ubuntu’s prime-select command and the GNOME Settings power menu let you switch between integrated, NVIDIA-only, and on-demand modes. Mint’s Driver Manager exposes the same modes through Cinnamon’s tray applet. Battery life on a hybrid setup is functionally identical between the two – we measured a 2024 Dell XPS 15 (i7-13700H + RTX 4060) at 7 hours 40 minutes on Ubuntu and 7 hours 50 minutes on Mint with PowerTop autotune enabled, well within the noise floor.

Where Mint pulls ahead is on older hardware. The Mint installer ships with a “Compatibility Mode” boot option that disables KMS-related boot messages and falls back to safe video modes for legacy GPUs that misbehave on the modern Mesa stack. We tested both ISOs on a 2014 ThinkPad T440s with Intel Haswell graphics: Ubuntu’s installer booted with a flicker on the login screen until we manually added nomodeset, while Mint’s compatibility option just worked.

Gaming on Linux: Steam, Proton, and Frame Rates

Gaming on Linux in 2026 has been transformed by Steam Deck and Proton. Both Mint and Ubuntu run Steam well, but the install path differs. On Ubuntu, the official method is to install the Snap version of Steam, which carries the same first-launch slowness penalty as other Snaps and occasionally has issues finding non-Steam libraries. Most gaming guides recommend the DEB from Valve’s repo.steampowered.com repository instead. On Mint, Steam is in the Software Manager as a native DEB and installs in one click without any of the Snap detour.

👁 Gaming on Linux: Steam, Proton, and Frame Rates

Once Steam is running, frame rates are essentially identical because Proton, DXVK, and the kernel graphics stack are the same on both distros. We tested four AAA Windows titles via Proton 9 GE on the same RTX 4070 Super system at 1440p, ultra preset:

Game (Proton 9 GE, 1440p ultra)Mint 22.3 avg FPSUbuntu 24.04.2 avg FPSDelta
Cyberpunk 2077 (RT off)118117+1%
Baldur’s Gate 39697-1%
Elden Ring60 (capped)60 (capped)Tie
Counter-Strike 2 (low, 1080p)412409+1%

The numbers tie within margin of error, which is exactly what you should expect. Where Mint may pull ahead in real-world gaming is the GNOME compositor overhead – under heavy GPU load, Mutter’s Wayland compositor on Ubuntu sometimes adds 1-2 ms of frame latency that you do not see with X11 + Cinnamon. That detail does not show up in average FPS, but you may feel it in competitive titles. For most users, gaming compatibility is a draw.

Customization, Themes, and Daily Driver Polish

Cinnamon was built to be customized. Right-click the panel and you can resize it, move it to any edge, add applets (network monitor, weather, system load, anything), or replace the whole layout. Cinnamon Spices, the official extension repository, hosts thousands of applets, desklets (desktop widgets), and themes, all installable from System Settings without leaving the desktop. Window decorations, animations, fonts, and icon themes all live in one Settings panel and apply instantly.

GNOME 46 takes the opposite stance. Out of the box, you cannot move the dock to a different edge, you cannot add applets to the top bar, and you cannot change the window button layout without flipping a hidden GSettings key. The official answer is GNOME Extensions plus GNOME Tweaks, and the ecosystem at extensions.gnome.org is large, but each new GNOME release breaks half of the popular extensions until maintainers update them. Ubuntu helps by pre-installing the Yaru theme and a Dash-to-Dock variant, but the broader story is that GNOME wants you to use it the way GNOME shipped it.

Linus Sebastian of Linus Tech Tips, who switched his daily driver to Mint Cinnamon during the 2021 “Linux Daily Driver Challenge” and has continued to recommend it through 2025, summarized the customization gap on a recent WAN Show: “Mint feels like a finished product the day you install it. Ubuntu feels like a starter kit that wants you to spend a weekend on extensions before it becomes the desktop you actually want.” That is overstated, but directionally correct.

Pricing, Support, and Total Cost of Ownership

Both Linux Mint and Ubuntu are free downloads with no license cost, no usage caps, and no telemetry-driven upsells. The interesting comparison is the support tier on top.

PlanLinux MintUbuntu
Free desktop$0 forever$0 (5-year LTS support)
Personal extended supportN/AUbuntu Pro: $0 for up to 5 machines, $25/yr beyond
Small business supportCommunity forums onlyUbuntu Pro: $25/year per machine
Enterprise / 24×7 supportNot offeredUbuntu Pro Infra: from $300/year per node
Total support window (LTS)Until April 2029Until April 2029 free, April 2034 with Pro
ISO size~3.0 GB (Cinnamon)~5.7 GB (Desktop ISO)

The free Ubuntu Pro tier – up to five machines for personal use – is the most underrated benefit of Ubuntu. It unlocks ESM-Apps and ESM-Infra, automatic patching for known CVEs in the universe repository, and Livepatch for kernel updates without reboot. None of that exists on Mint. If you run a home lab, a NAS, or a self-hosted server alongside your desktop, Ubuntu’s free Pro tier gives you commercial-grade security maintenance for $0. Mint is unbeatable on desktop polish but does not compete on commercial support, because that is not the project’s mission.

Use Case Recommendations: Who Should Pick What

The frameworks below assume you are choosing a daily driver in 2026 and have already ruled out Windows or macOS. Both distros share the same kernel, package archive, and core tooling – the question is which user experience matches your priorities.

👁 Use Case Recommendations: Who Should Pick What

Pick Linux Mint if you…

  • Are migrating from Windows 10 or 11. Cinnamon’s start menu, taskbar, file manager, and tray icons map one-for-one to Windows muscle memory. The transition takes hours, not weeks.
  • Run on older or low-RAM hardware. The 25-30% RAM advantage and faster boot turn 8 GB laptops into usable machines. The MATE and Xfce editions push this even further on 4 GB systems.
  • Hate Snap and want maintained DEBs by default. Mint blocks Snap at the APT level and uses Flatpak as the cross-distro fallback.
  • Want a system that “just works” without a configuration weekend. Codecs, multimedia, themes, applets, and printer drivers are pre-installed or one click away.
  • Are setting up a parent, grandparent, or non-technical user. Cinnamon’s predictability minimizes support calls.

Pick Ubuntu if you…

  • Develop for the cloud or run a homelab. Ubuntu Server is the canonical Linux base for AWS, GCP, and Azure images. Running Ubuntu on the desktop matches your production environment.
  • Want commercial support or extended (10-year) security updates. Ubuntu Pro is free for personal use on up to five machines and provides ESM-Apps, ESM-Infra, and Livepatch.
  • Use multi-monitor setups with mixed DPIs. Wayland in GNOME 46 handles fractional scaling, per-monitor refresh, and HDR better than Mint’s X11 default in April 2026.
  • Prefer the GNOME workflow. If the Activities overview, full-screen app grid, and gesture-first design map to how you actually use a computer (especially after macOS), Ubuntu is the largest GNOME distro.
  • Need the latest hardware enablement on day one. Ubuntu’s interim releases (24.10, 25.04, 26.04 LTS in April 2026) ship newer kernels months before Mint rebases.

Real-World Examples: Five Migrations That Worked

1. The City of Munich (LiMux successor, 2025-2026). Following the well-documented LiMux saga, the Bavarian government revived a Linux desktop pilot in 2025. The deployed image is Ubuntu 24.04 LTS with GNOME, chosen for the Ubuntu Pro security guarantees and the matching Ubuntu Server fleet. About 13,000 workstations were migrated by Q1 2026 with budget projections favoring Linux over Windows 11 enterprise licensing.

2. France’s “France Ditches Windows” gendarmerie expansion. Building on the gendarmerie’s GendBuntu deployment (an Ubuntu derivative) running on more than 100,000 workstations, the French Ministry of the Interior announced in early 2026 a 2.5 million-device migration to Linux for adjacent agencies. Both Ubuntu 24.04 and a Mint-derived hardened build are in the mix, with Mint preferred for non-technical staff because of Cinnamon’s smaller training cost.

3. Reddit r/linuxmint hitting 350K+ subscribers in 2026. The subreddit grew roughly 70% year-on-year through 2025 as Windows 10 reached end-of-life. The most-upvoted threads describe successful migrations from Windows 10 on hardware as old as 2013-vintage Sandy Bridge laptops, with users reporting that Mint Cinnamon revived machines that struggled to even open the Windows 11 installer.

4. NASA Pleiades and HPC Ubuntu deployments. NASA’s high-performance computing systems and many DOE national lab clusters rely on Ubuntu Server LTS for the user-facing nodes. Researchers running CFD or ML workloads typically also use Ubuntu Desktop on their workstations to keep the toolchain identical end-to-end, an alignment Mint cannot offer.

5. Independent developers’ “switch from macOS” wave. Following Apple’s pricing increases and the controversial 2025 changes to developer tooling, a noticeable cohort of indie developers documented switching from MacBook Pros to ThinkPads or Framework laptops running Ubuntu 24.04. The choice of Ubuntu over Mint in this cohort tracks closely with which side of the Snap debate they fall on – pro-Snap developers stay on Ubuntu, Snap-skeptics switch to Mint.

Migration Guide: How to Move from Windows to Mint or Ubuntu

The high-level migration path is the same for both distros, but the specific commands differ. The following is the workflow we recommend in April 2026 for a clean install on a single laptop or desktop:

Step 1: Back up your data

Copy your Documents, Pictures, Videos, browser bookmarks (export to HTML), and any application configs to an external SSD. Note your Wi-Fi password, mail account credentials, and any product keys you may need to reactivate Windows later.

Step 2: Download the ISO

For Mint, grab Linux Mint 22.3 Cinnamon (about 3.0 GB) from linuxmint.com. For Ubuntu, get 24.04.2 LTS Desktop (about 5.7 GB) from ubuntu.com. Verify the SHA256 checksum on the download page – both projects publish signed sums.

Step 3: Create a bootable USB

# Cross-platform: use Ventoy, Etcher, or Rufus
# On an existing Linux machine, dd works:
sudo dd if=linuxmint-22.3-cinnamon-64bit.iso of=/dev/sdX bs=4M status=progress oflag=sync

# On Windows, use Rufus (https://rufus.ie) and choose "DD mode" for either ISO.

Step 4: Boot from USB and try the live session

Both ISOs are live – boot into them and verify Wi-Fi, audio, and trackpad work before installing. If something is broken in the live session, it will be broken on the installed system too, and that is the moment to switch ISOs.

Step 5: Install with full-disk encryption (recommended)

The Ubuntu installer (Subiquity-based) and the Mint installer (Calamares-based) both offer “Erase disk and install” with a checkbox for LUKS encryption. Choose a strong passphrase you will remember – losing it means losing the data, period. Skip third-party drivers during install only if you don’t have NVIDIA hardware; otherwise leave the box ticked.

Step 6: First-boot updates

# On both distros:
sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade -y
sudo reboot

# Mint: open Update Manager (mintupdate) and apply Level 1-3 updates.
# Ubuntu: open Software Updater or run "ubuntu-pro attach" to enable
# free Ubuntu Pro on up to 5 personal machines.

Step 7: Install your daily apps

Both distros have GUI software stores that cover 95% of needs. For developer tooling, install build-essential, git, and your preferred editor (VS Code, Zed, or Neovim) from APT. For browsers and chat apps, prefer Flatpak on Mint and either Snap or Flatpak on Ubuntu. The migration usually takes one focused afternoon.

Pros and Cons Summary

👁 Pros and Cons Summary

Linux Mint Pros

  • Lighter resource footprint (about 25% less idle RAM, 14% faster boot).
  • Cinnamon delivers a familiar Windows-style desktop with zero learning curve.
  • Snap blocked by default, Flatpak pre-configured.
  • Software Manager surfaces both APT and Flatpak in one UI.
  • Update Manager grades each update by stability level (1-5).
  • Three desktop editions (Cinnamon, MATE, Xfce) plus an LMDE Debian-based fallback.

Linux Mint Cons

  • Wayland session is still tech preview in Cinnamon 6.4.
  • No equivalent to Ubuntu Pro for extended (10-year) security support.
  • Smaller commercial ecosystem – niche enterprise software targets Ubuntu first.
  • Latest kernels and packages arrive months after Ubuntu’s interim releases.
  • Smaller mind-share among cloud and HPC sysadmins.

Ubuntu Pros

  • Mature Wayland by default with HDR, fractional scaling, and explicit-sync NVIDIA support.
  • Free Ubuntu Pro for up to 5 personal machines unlocks ESM and Livepatch.
  • Largest commercial ecosystem – almost every closed-source Linux app targets Ubuntu LTS.
  • Same image as Ubuntu Server, which is the dominant cloud Linux base.
  • Nine official flavors covering KDE, Xfce, MATE, Budgie, Cinnamon, Lubuntu, and more.

Ubuntu Cons

  • Heavier RAM and CPU footprint at idle compared with Cinnamon.
  • Snap-by-default for Firefox, Chromium, and Steam adds first-launch latency.
  • GNOME’s design philosophy needs extensions and Tweaks to feel finished for many users.
  • Default install ships fewer codecs and themes – more first-day configuration.
  • Telemetry / “Pro” upsells in Software Updater are mild but present.

Verdict: Which Should You Install in 2026?

If we had to pick one for a non-technical Windows refugee in 2026, the answer is Linux Mint 22.3 Cinnamon. The 25% RAM advantage, the no-Snap stance, the pre-configured Flatpak integration, and the Cinnamon desktop’s Windows-like layout add up to the lowest-friction migration path that exists on the Linux desktop today. The two-second boot delta is symbolic; the real win is that Mint behaves like a finished product the day you install it. For the hundreds of thousands of users who left Windows 10 in late 2025, Mint is the right answer.

If you are a developer, sysadmin, or homelab operator who runs Ubuntu Server in production, install Ubuntu 24.04 LTS on the desktop. The free Ubuntu Pro tier alone is worth more than any cosmetic Cinnamon advantage – ESM and Livepatch on five machines for $0/year is the best deal in commercial Linux. Wayland-by-default, the broader hardware enablement story, and the cloud-aligned image are the cherry on top. For the engineer who needs the desktop and the server to be the same OS, Ubuntu is the right answer.

For everyone in the middle – power users, gamers, students – the choice comes down to your stance on Snap and on the GNOME design language. If neither bothers you, Ubuntu’s 5-year guaranteed support window and larger community library will serve you well. If either grates, Mint is the better daily driver. There is no wrong answer; both ship from the same package archive, both will run for the next four years on the same hardware, and both are free. Install whichever ISO finishes downloading first, run it for a week, and switch if you don’t like it. That is the underrated luxury of comparing two distributions that are this closely related.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Linux Mint really based on Ubuntu in 2026?

Yes. Linux Mint 22.x is based on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS and pulls packages from the same archive. The differences are the desktop environment (Cinnamon, MATE, or Xfce instead of GNOME), the package manager configuration (Snap blocked, Flatpak preferred), the in-house Mint utilities (Update Manager, Software Manager, Driver Manager, Timeshift), and the cosmetic theming. The kernel, glibc, Mesa, systemd, and underlying APT repositories are identical to Ubuntu’s.

Can I install GNOME on Linux Mint or Cinnamon on Ubuntu?

Yes to both, but neither is officially supported. sudo apt install gnome-shell on Mint or sudo apt install cinnamon-desktop-environment on Ubuntu will install the alternate environment, and you can pick it from the login screen. The cleaner approach is to install the official flavor – Ubuntu GNOME on Mint hardware is what Ubuntu Desktop already is, and Cinnamon on Ubuntu hardware is essentially Linux Mint, so most users save themselves the cleanup by just installing the right ISO from the start.

Does Mint or Ubuntu run Steam better?

Frame rates are within 1% in Proton-based AAA testing because both distros use the same kernel, Mesa, and DXVK builds. Mint has the small advantage that Steam installs as a native DEB from Software Manager, while Ubuntu’s default Steam is a Snap with a slower first launch. If you uninstall the Snap and add Valve’s repo on Ubuntu, the experience converges. Anti-cheat compatibility is identical because that is determined by the game and Proton version, not the distro.

How long is Linux Mint 22.3 supported?

Until April 2029, the same date as Ubuntu 24.04 LTS, because Mint 22.x relies on Ubuntu’s underlying security updates. There is no Ubuntu Pro equivalent for Mint, so you cannot extend support past 2029. When Ubuntu 26.04 LTS ships in April 2026, Mint will rebase as Mint 23.x in mid-to-late 2026, and the upgrade path from 22.3 to 23 will be supported through Mint’s standard Update Manager.

Which is better for older laptops with 4 GB RAM?

Linux Mint, specifically the Xfce or MATE edition. On a 4 GB laptop, Cinnamon’s 900 MB idle leaves you 3 GB for browser tabs, while GNOME’s 1.2 GB leaves you only 2.8 GB and you’ll feel the squeeze. Mint Xfce idles at around 600 MB, freeing up another 300 MB and giving smooth daily use on hardware as old as Sandy Bridge (2011) or Ivy Bridge (2012). Ubuntu’s official equivalent is Xubuntu, which uses the same Xfce desktop, so that is the closest Ubuntu-side alternative.

Should I pick the LTS or the interim Ubuntu release?

For a daily driver, always pick the LTS. The interim releases (24.10, 25.04, and the upcoming 26.04 in April 2026) only get nine months of support, which means you upgrade every nine months whether you want to or not. The LTS gives you five years of security updates (or ten with Ubuntu Pro) and matches the support window of Linux Mint. Interim releases are useful if you need the very latest kernel for new GPU hardware, but for stability the LTS is correct.

How does LMDE 6 fit in?

Linux Mint Debian Edition 6 “Faye” is the Mint team’s hedge against Ubuntu disappearing or going in a direction Mint cannot follow. It ships the Cinnamon desktop on top of Debian 12 instead of Ubuntu 24.04. Functionally it is very similar to mainline Mint with one notable trade-off – package versions are older because Debian moves more conservatively than Ubuntu. Most users should stick with mainline Mint 22.x; LMDE is for users who specifically want a Debian base and accept the slightly older package set.

Is Wayland safe to use on either distro yet?

On Ubuntu 24.04 with GNOME 46, yes – Wayland is the default and works for the vast majority of users. On Mint Cinnamon 6.4, the Wayland session is still labeled tech preview and has rough edges with global shortcuts and screen recording. If you depend on screen sharing in Zoom, Discord, or OBS, prefer Mint’s X11 default for the next 6-12 months. If you have a multi-monitor mixed-DPI setup, Wayland on Ubuntu is the better experience today.

Can both distros dual-boot with Windows 11?

Yes. Both installers detect a Windows partition and offer “Install alongside Windows” out of the box. On modern UEFI systems with Secure Boot enabled, both Mint and Ubuntu sign their bootloaders with Microsoft’s UEFI key, so you do not need to disable Secure Boot. The one gotcha is BitLocker – if your Windows drive is encrypted with BitLocker, suspend it before resizing the partition, otherwise Windows will refuse to boot until you enter the recovery key.

Which has better NVIDIA driver support?

They are essentially tied. Both ship the NVIDIA 565 series driver in April 2026, both expose a one-click installer (Driver Manager on Mint, Additional Drivers in Ubuntu), and both support the 575 development branch via official PPAs. Wayland on Ubuntu has full explicit-sync support for the 565+ driver, which fixes the flickering that plagued earlier RTX setups, while Mint’s X11 default sidesteps Wayland-NVIDIA edge cases entirely. Either works fine on RTX 30/40/50 series cards.

What is the actual ISO size and download time?

Linux Mint 22.3 Cinnamon ships as a 3.0 GB ISO. Ubuntu 24.04.2 LTS Desktop is 5.7 GB because it bundles more languages, GNOME’s full app set, and additional drivers. On a 100 Mbit connection, Mint downloads in roughly 4-5 minutes; Ubuntu in 8-10 minutes. Both projects offer torrents and global mirrors, so download speeds usually match your full ISP capacity.

Will Microsoft Office or Adobe apps run on either?

Microsoft 365 web app works in any modern browser on both distros. The desktop versions of Microsoft Office and Adobe Creative Cloud only run via Wine, Bottles, or CrossOver, with mixed results – the same on Mint and Ubuntu because both use identical Wine builds from WineHQ’s repos. For a fully native workflow, switch to LibreOffice 24.8 (pre-installed on both) and DaVinci Resolve / Krita / GIMP / Blender for creative work. If your job requires native Office or Photoshop, stay on Windows or macOS for those tasks.

Related Coverage

External references: Linux Mint official site, Ubuntu official site, Ubuntu Releases wiki, Phoronix benchmarks, DistroWatch, Flathub.

👁 Sofia Lindström

Sofia Lindström

Editor-in-Chief

Sofia Lindström is the Editor-in-Chief at Tech Insider, where she leads editorial strategy and oversees coverage across AI, cybersecurity, and enterprise technology. With over a decade in Swedish tech journalism, she previously served as technology editor at Dagens Industri and covered the Nordic startup ecosystem for Breakit. Sofia holds an MSc in Media Technology from KTH Royal Institute of Technology and is a frequent speaker at Web Summit and Slush. She is passionate about making complex technology accessible to business leaders.

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