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Apple's latest iPad Air is a minor upgrade over last year's model, but there are still some changes worth noting beyond a new chip.

M3-iPad-Air.jpg

The eighth-generation iPad Air builds on the foundation of last year's model with a series of specific upgrades focused on performance, memory, and connectivity. While the overall design and experience remains the same, the newer model introduces Apple's M4 chip, additional unified memory, Apple-designed wireless hardware, and support for newer connectivity standards. Here's everything that differs between the 2025 and 2026 iPad Air models:

iPad Air (seventh-generation, 2025)iPad Air (eighth-generation, 2026)
M3 chipM4 chip
8GB unified memory12GB unified memory
Broadcom wireless chipApple N1 wireless chip
Wi-Fi 6E connectivityWi-Fi 7 connectivity
Bluetooth 5.3 connectivityBluetooth 6 connectivity
Qualcomm SDX70M 5G modemApple C1X modem


The largest change between the two models is the transition from Apple's M3 chip to the newer M4 chip. Beyond modest CPU performance gains, the M4 introduces architectural improvements that increase transistor count, boost machine learning performance, improve memory bandwidth, and enhance efficiency through updated fabrication technology and redesigned cores.

M3 ChipM4 Chip
Made using TSMC's 3nm technology (N3)Made using TSMC's enhanced 3nm technology (N3E)
Based on iPhone 15 Pro's A17 Pro chip (2023)Based on iPhone 16's A18 chip (2024)
25 billion transistors28 billion transistors (+12%)
8-core CPU
(4 performance + 4 efficiency cores)
8-core CPU
(3 performance + 5 efficiency cores)
4.05 GHz CPU clock speed4.3 GHz CPU clock speed
16-core Neural Engine, 18 trillion operations per second16-core Neural Engine, 38 trillion operations per second (+111%)
LPDDR5 memoryLPDDR5X memory
100 GB/s memory bandwidth120 GB/s memory bandwidth (+20%)
Dedicated display engine
GPU with standard power efficiencyMore power-efficient GPU: Maintains performance with significantly less power


Overall, the upgrade from the 2025 iPad Air to the 2026 iPad Air is minor. The new model introduces a faster M4 chip, more unified memory, and newer wireless technologies, but the broader experience remains fundamentally unchanged in any noticeable way.

Apple itself signals how incremental the update is: the company continues to advertise the same battery life, despite the introduction of the more efficient C1X modem, and the device retains identical color options and even the same marketing wallpapers. For the overwhelming majority of iPad Air users, the performance difference between the two models is likely to be negligible, especially for everyday tasks.

The new iPad Air is primarily aimed at buyers who simply want a capable, well-balanced iPad rather than those seeking a major upgrade from a more recent model. The Air continues to occupy the middle ground in Apple's lineup, offering significantly more power and capability than the entry-level iPad while remaining substantially less expensive than the iPad Pro. The transition to the M4 chip, additional memory, and newer connectivity standards like Wi-Fi 7 means that new buyers receive more modern hardware and longer-term headroom, making the device somewhat more future-proof.

For existing users, however, there is little reason to upgrade. Anyone using an M3-based iPad Air will see minimal real-world benefits from moving to the M4 model, and even owners of M1 or M2 versions are unlikely to experience transformative improvements in typical use. Instead, the update simply ensures that customers purchasing a new iPad Air today receive Apple's newer underlying technology in a familiar package.

Article Link: M3 vs. M4 iPad Air Buyer's Guide: All Differences Compared
 
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i dont know how to say this but, my iPad air 4 from 2020 with a14 chip 4GB RAM does everything and snappy. It will only get you if you open many tabs, but even then its workable and not that bad.
Same!
Every single year I think about upgrading, but there never seems to be much reason to.
My battery life is starting to get noticeably shorter though... I'm actually thinking of getting the 12th gen base model. Or at least, I was when I thought that it was coming out this week. I dont know if I should just get an M4 Air or keep waiting to see what the 12th gen offers. an a18 chip and 8GB of RAM would be quite an upgrade for us Air 4 users. An M4 and 12GB seems like insane overkill.
 
You can currently get an iPad Pro 13 inch M4 with cellular and nano texture glass an 1tb storage for $1,099.00 at Costco. Online only.
That would have been a great deal. Looks like the 1 TB M4 model is sold out. I only see 2 TB listed.
 
I just realized that the iPad Pro is now lighter than the iPad Air. 579 vs 616 grams for the wifi models. 582 vs 617 for cellular on the 13 inch models.

Not that it matters in effect but it's just interesting that the Air is no longer the most Air iPad Ever.

I discovered this while comparing recent models. If they would just put 120Hz on the Air I'd buy one right now. Which is probably exactly why they don't, they want me to get that iPad Pro.

 
I just realized that the iPad Pro is now lighter than the iPad Air. 579 vs 616 grams for the wifi models. 582 vs 617 for cellular on the 13 inch models.

Not that it matters in effect but it's just interesting that the Air is no longer the most Air iPad Ever.

I discovered this while comparing recent models. If they would just put 120Hz on the Air I'd buy one right now. Which is probably exactly why they don't, they want me to get that iPad Pro.

Been this way since the redesign of the Pro in 2024… thinner, too
 
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Biggest thing with this update is the 12 GB of RAM (plus the M4) makes it a little more future proof, but if you have an iPad with an M series chip in it already there is no good reason to upgrade.

I don't use such models on this device as much as others, but I tested out for two days at my org what might be called a typical LLM-based workflow on both 8GB and 12GB iPads. That includes the use of multiple windows with the new windowing capabilities, and the use of several apps (browsers, Slack, etc). While I still think that things like Xcode and/or solid IDE, and built-in good terminal solution with built-in keep alives, and other such things . . . I could definitely tell that 12GB ram made a real difference. Page refreshing is an obvious one that anyone will notice if you are tab crazy like I am; but all time-to-first-token concerns and the ability to use bigger models is workflow-changing. Most tech workers have the income to just move directly to the iPad Pro, and that is what I would recommend to many if you can get iPadOS to work for you. But not everyone who is going to need to use LLMs in the future is a tech worker with higher-than-average salaries. $400 still means something to a lot of people.
 
Biggest thing with this update is the 12 GB of RAM (plus the M4) makes it a little more future proof, but if you have an iPad with an M series chip in it already there is no good reason to upgrade.
Unless you're stuck with 64GB like me on my 5th gen M1
 
Unless you're stuck with 64GB like me on my 5th gen M1
Yeah, admittedly that was the only reason I updated from my M1 iPad Air. If I had bought the 256 GB model back then I wouldn't have upgraded yet. Lesson learned (although not really, I still only bought the 128 GB M3 so that will probably what dictates my next upgrade more than anything).
 
If you compare this to the last version that had the A model chips in it, they haven't really made any changes in the Air in ages aside from changing to the M chips.
 
do you think the saving i could get a m3 ipad Air for is enough to not to get the latest one (i really only want it for watching videos on youttube, Netflix, Logic mixer view for my Logic Pro onn my Macbook pro still on M1 and reading )
 
From the company that gave us pro motion and 256GB starting space for the iPhone 17 non-pro, it seems strange of its omission for the iPad Air which starts with only 128GB and no pro motion.
 
No reason for M3 Air users to upgrade. That being said the 12GB RAM/Unified memory should be beneficial. Sadly the M4 iPad Pro has only 8GB for 256 and 512GB versions.
 
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