Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
70,780
42,706


2026 could be a bumper year for Apple's Mac lineup, with the company expected to announce as many as four separate MacBook launches. Rumors suggest Apple will court both ends of the consumer spectrum, with more affordable options for students and feature-rich premium lines for users that seek the highest specifications from a laptop.


Below is a breakdown of what we're expecting over the next 12 months from Apple's multi-pronged MacBook offering. Got your eye on a particular model? Let us know in the comments what you're looking forward to most.

Low-Cost MacBook

Low-Cost-MacBook-Feature-A18-Pro.jpg

Apple is preparing to enter the low-cost laptop market for the first time by developing a budget MacBook aimed at luring away customers from Chromebooks and entry-level Windows PCs, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. The new device is said to be designed for students, businesses, and casual users, and will target people who mainly browse the web, work on documents, or dabble in light media editing.

The new MacBook is said to have a 13-inch display, similar to but slightly smaller than the MacBook Air, and will feature an ultra-thin, lightweight design with a lower-end LCD display. According to reputable industry analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, Apple is said to be using its A18 Pro chip to power the machine. The A18 Pro chip debuted in the iPhone 16 Pro and is around 40% slower than Apple's latest M4 chip, but its multi-core CPU performance is virtually identical to the M1 chip in the 2020 MacBook Air, and it even outperforms the M1 chip for graphics.

The A18 Pro chip lacks Thunderbolt support, so the new MacBook would likely be equipped with regular USB-C ports. The current 13-inch MacBook Air starts at $999 in the U.S., so the new MacBook would likely have a starting price of between $699 and $899. The more-affordable MacBook could also come in some fun new colors like Silver, Blue, Pink, and Yellow.

MacBook Pro With M5 Pro and M5 Max

M5-MacBook-Pro.jpg

Apple is going to refresh the rest of the MacBook Pro lineup with M5 Pro and M5 Max chips in early 2026, having already updated its base 14-inch MacBook Pro with a standard M5 chip in October. The M5 series is based on TSMC's third-generation 3-nanometer technology. Based on improvements to the base MacBook Pro with M5 chip, faster SSD performance and higher memory bandwith are also likely for the high-end models. No other major changes are expected, with Apple holding over a completely refreshed design until the M6 models.

If Apple retains current pricing levels, the 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro chip will start at $1,999, while the 16-inch model with M5 Pro chip will start at $2,399. For the M5 Max equivalents, prices could start at $3,199 for the 14-inch model, and $3,499 for the 16-inch machine.

M5 MacBook Air

macbook-air-blue.jpeg

While the M4 MacBook Air model isn't exactly old, attention is already turning to its successor. The M5 series is reportedly being manufactured using TSMC's advanced 3-nanometer process technology, and we have some idea of what to expect in terms of performance, thanks to the recently released M5 iPad Pro: benchmarks show single-core scores around 4,133 and multi-core scores around 15,437. That's roughly a 12-15% jump over the M4 iPad Pro in both categories. As for graphics performance, the M5 chip appears to have up to a 36% faster GPU compared to the M4 chip.

The benchmark suggests Apple has focused on modest clock speed increases and core-level efficiency improvements for the M5 chip, rather than an architecture overhaul. In other words, the M5 will be similar to the step-wise performance upgrade from M3 to M4. Expect 10-15% faster CPU speeds, a slightly more powerful GPU, and better efficiency, potentially leading to even longer battery life.

Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reports that Apple plans to roll out M5 versions of the MacBook Air in the first quarter of this year. Based on previous spring refreshes, this suggests a likely March 2026 window. As for pricing, we expect it to remain stable, with the base model sticking with the current entry-level $999 price.

MacBook Pro With Touchscreen OLED Display

M6-MacBook-Pro-Feature-1.jpg

Apple is reportedly developing a completely new version of the MacBook Pro packed with next-generation hardware features. The redesigned models are expected to boast M6 chips, which could adopt a completely new packaging based on TSMC's 2nm process that allows components such as the CPU, GPUs, DRAM, and Neural Engine to be more tightly integrated.

Bloomberg's Mark Gurman says Apple is readying OLED technology for these models. Compared to current MacBook Pro models that use mini-LED screens, the benefits of OLED technology would include increased brightness, higher contrast ratio with deeper blacks, improved power efficiency for longer battery life, and more. In addition, Gurman reports that the new machines will also have "thinner and lighter frames." Apple is apparently focusing on delivering the thinnest possible device without compromising on battery life or major new features.

The redesigned 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro models are also expected to have a hole-punch camera at the top of the display, rather than the notch we've become accustomed to... Click here to read rest of article

Article Link: Apple Is Expected to Launch These Four MacBooks in 2026
 
Last edited:
I'm still extremely happy with my MBP M3 Pro and see zero reason to upgrade anytime soon. In fact, I use it in clamshell mode as my desktop computer (attached to a thunderbolt dock connected to dual monitors).

That being said, I'm super eager for the M5 Ultra Mac Studio to come out.
 
Mark my words:

If Apple releases a touch-screen Mac, an entirely new operating system will be released.

The versatility and complexity of the mac, the UI of touch screen devices we've been used to.
 
Touch screen is still DOA. Its so unergonomic that I fail to see why would anyone want that.

The only way that this can work is if Apple pencil is supported and you can open to notebook flat so it becomes like a tablet. If the hinge is not able to do 180 open then its useless.
 
It's ironic that Apple finally has the technology to make super fast and efficient chips that would be perfect for impossibly small, thin and light MacBooks, unlike when the 12" MacBook was released, but the iPad Pro is probably preventing them from doing so in fear of people ditching the iPad for it (even though the iPad is not a Mac).

I am remaining hopeful that the A18 (or similar) pending MacBook won't just be a cheaper Air. We need a successor to the 12" MacBook with built in cellular, super thin bezels, an edge to edge keyboard and insane battery life. Even if it is a higher-priced SKU. Maybe a 'MacBook mini' at a super low price, and 'MacBook mini Pro or Plus' with OLED, 5G and double the default RAM.

A cheap version of the 13" Air will only satisfy their market share numbers (and of course, bringing more people into their ecosystem and services segment). Which would be a very boring, Tim Cookery thing to do.
 
As long as it's optional. Not everyone wants a lower brightness display susceptible to burn in.

I'm totally fine with that.

I'm really stunned they haven't brought the display options to a BTO option so they could profit (massively, no doubt) off the folks who are willing to pay for certain display upgrades.

FTR, I'm into my 2nd year of full time OLED TV usage with macOS and have no burn in whatsoever. 🤷‍♂️
 
I'm totally fine with that.

I'm really stunned they haven't brought the display options to a BTO option so they could profit (massively, no doubt) off the folks who are willing to pay for certain display upgrades.

FTR, I'm into my 2nd year of full time OLED TV usage with macOS and have no burn in whatsoever. 🤷‍♂️
Because they know the number of folks who would pay extra for it are a very very small minority. The number of people buying the current matte displays represents less than 5% of sales.
 
As long as it's optional. Not everyone wants a lower brightness display susceptible to burn in.
Tandem OLED would be super bright (and a stunning display) and would significantly reduce the risk of burn-in. These panels are being used in many new thin and light PC laptops, so I hope Apple uses them across the board soon (and not just in Pro MacBooks).

Edit: Tandem OLED as an option, of course.
 
Last edited:
Mark my words:

If Apple releases a touch-screen Mac, an entirely new operating system will be released.

The versatility and complexity of the mac, the UI of touch screen devices we've been used to.
There is also the fact that iPadOS is now windowed, its apps have a menu bar and it supports mouse and keyboard.

I also think we haven’t heard/seen the last of different Apple operating systems merging somehow, even though Federighi said it wouldn’t happen.
 
I'd be all over a Macbook Air if Apple adds ProMotion to the M5 variant. I just can't get used to any screen without it. My M3 Pro MBP is great as it is, just a bit clunky

Same. But of course, that's why they do it. They want people like to us to get the Pro instead. I'm sure they will milk it as long as they can, as they did with the iPhone. But the fact that they brought ProMotion to the non-Pro iPhone tells me that a MacBook Air with ProMotion will happen eventually.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.