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Apple recently updated the iPad Air, narrowing the gap with the iPad Pro, but how different are the two product lines and which should you buy?

iPad-Pro-2024-vs-Air-2024-Feature.jpg

Apple has now refreshed the iPad Air with the M4 chip, representing a small update over the previous model from 2025, which introduced the M3 chip. While the upgrade brings improved performance and efficiency, it does not significantly alter the feature set or overall positioning of the iPad Air within the lineup.

By contrast, the iPad Pro continues to sit at the top of Apple's tablet range, now equipped with the latest M5 chip. This update builds on the major redesign introduced in 2024, which brought a substantially thinner and lighter design, tandem OLED display technology, and a range of high-end features aimed at professional workflows. The latest revision focuses more on internal improvements, particularly in GPU performance and AI acceleration, rather than introducing major new capabilities.


As a result, the gap between the iPad Air and iPad Pro is now less about general performance and more about specific features and use cases. The iPad Air delivers much of the same core experience at a lower price point, while the iPad Pro differentiates itself with its display technology, advanced hardware capabilities, and additional headroom for demanding tasks.

Should you consider purchasing the iPad Air to save money, or do you need the high-end features of the iPad Pro? Our guide answers the question of how to decide which of these two iPads is best for you.

iPad Air (M4, 2026)iPad Pro (M5, 2025)
Liquid Retina display (LED backlit display with IPS technology)Ultra Retina XDR display (Tandem OLED)
ProMotion technology for refresh rates up to 120Hz
11-inch model SDR brightness: 500 nits max
13-inch model SDR brightness: 600 nits max
SDR brightness: 1,000 nits max
XDR brightness: 1,000 nits max full screen, 1,600 nits peak (HDR content only)
Nano-texture display glass option on 1TB and 2TB models
Drive external displays at 60HzDrive external displays at up to 120Hz
Adaptive Sync support
‌M‌4 chipM5 chip
Made using TSMC's enhanced 3nm technology (N3E)Made using TSMC's third-generation 3nm process (N3P)
Based on iPhone 16's A18 chip (2024)Based on A19 Pro chip from iPhone 17 Pro (2025)
8-core CPU (3 performance + 5 efficiency cores)Up to 10 CPU cores (4 performance + 6 efficiency cores)
9-core GPU10-core GPU
Integrated Neural Accelerator in every GPU core
Metal 4 developer APIsMetal 4 developer APIs with Tensor APIs to program GPU Neural Accelerators
12GB memory256GB and 512GB models: 12GB memory
1TB and 2TB models: 16GB memory
120 GB/s unified memory bandwidth153 GB/s unified memory bandwidth
Second-generation ray tracing engineThird-generation ray tracing engine
First-generation dynamic cachingSecond-generation dynamic caching
Shader coresEnhanced shader cores
GPU with standard power efficiencyMore power-efficient GPU: Maintains performance with significantly less power
Improved thermal design with graphite sheets and copper
Touch ID in top buttonTrueDepth camera system for Face ID
Portrait mode with advanced bokeh and Depth Control
Portrait Lighting with six effects (Natural, Studio, Contour, Stage, Stage Mono, High-Key Mono)
Animoji and Memoji
LiDAR scanner
Adaptive True Tone flash
Rear ambient light sensor
ProRes video recording up to 4K at 30 fps (1080p at 30 fps for 256GB capacity)
ProRes video recording up to 4K at 60 fps with external recording
Two microphonesFour studio-quality microphones
Audio zoom
Stereo recording
Landscape stereo speakersFour speaker audio
Weight: 462 grams or 617 gramsWeight 444 grams or 579 grams
Depth: 6.1 mmDepth: 5.3 mm or 5.1 mm
Fast-charge capable (Up to 50% charge using a 60W adapter or higher in 30 minutes with the 11-inch model or 35 minutes with the 13-inch model)
USB‑C connectorUSB‑C connector with support for Thunderbolt/USB 4
Supports Magic Keyboard for iPad AirSupports Magic Keyboard for iPad Pro
128GB, 256GB, 512GB, or 1TB storage256GB, 512GB, 1TB, or 2TB storage
Up to 2× faster SSD read and write speeds
Available in Space Gray, Starlight, Purple, and BlueAvailable in Space Black and Silver
Price starting at $599Price starting at $999


Overall, the iPad Air is the better option for the majority of users, simply on the basis of value for money. For most people, the additional $400+ needed to buy the iPad Pro is not justified to get the likes of Face ID, a thinner design, four-speaker audio, and a ProMotion OLED display with refresh rates up to 120Hz.

One of the more significant changes in recent years is that performance is no longer the primary differentiator between the iPad Air and iPad Pro. With the M4 chip, the iPad Air already delivers a level of CPU performance that is effectively indistinguishable from the Pro in most real-world tasks. The remaining gap is increasingly concentrated in GPU-bound workloads, AI acceleration, and display technology, rather than general responsiveness or app performance.

Some iPad Pro features, such as LiDAR, up... Click here to read rest of article

Article Link: M4 iPad Air vs. M5 iPad Pro Buyer's Guide: 40+ Differences Compared
 
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I have the M4 iPad Pro. My needs are pretty basic, enough I could get by with a base iPad or iPad Air but I chose the pro for the screen. OLED and ProMotion matter a lot to me so I pay for them. Having the best display in my house be something portable like iPad is awesome, especially when I’m lazy and want to stay in bed.
 
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Obviously, if you can justify spending significantly more for a Pro model, you’ll benefit from the differences outlines here. Yesterday I received my new 512 GB iPad Air M4 (blue). It replaces my iPad Air 4th gen (256 GB). I have zero issues with the display on my old iPad and will probably continue to enjoy the similar display on my new one. I don’t do any ‘heavy’ work on my iPad — apart from the many Pages and Keynote documents I create — so it’ll almost certainly keep me going for the next several years.

So, in short, it’s the perfect iPad for me.
 
FYI, you can still get the m4 iPad Pro 256 at Costco for $700. Exactly the same price as the Air. I just looked but I don’t know how long that will last.
 
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I looove that the Pro continues to be thinner and lighter than the Air. Just makes the naming convention totally absurd. Naming aside, the nanotexture on the Pro's screen has been an absolute game-changer for outdoor use. Agree with the article that preference has become primarily use-case based.
 
The Pro model iPad Is my choice every time.
Face ID, OLED for movies, flashlight for getting up at night, lighter weight. Still have the M1 and it’s good. Thinking of upgrading soon.

iPad models compared to iPhone models:
Base iPad = iPhone e series
iPad Air or Mini = iPhone series
iPad Pro = iPhone Pro
 
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I disagree the Air is the best option for most people. It’s an OK option if you can’t afford the Pro with its OLED screen.

When it comes to basic users, the base model iPad is fine because they're just reading, watching videos and communicating with emails and so on. You can buy two for the price of an Air, so I wouldn’t worry about chip longevity.

The Air is there because Apple marketing knows that consumers often buy the middle priced option regardless of any actual details.
 
We're talking about garbage vs hot garbage here.
What would be acceptable for you, but please be realistic. Personally for me, they should have given it the iPP M2 display (promotion LCD) but if they don't want to give it 120hz yet, then at least FALD local dimming and quantum dot layer.
 
I bought an iPad Mini 2 at the peak of my career, when I could afford gadgets. At first it was neat cause I only had an iPhone 4S and it was like an iPhone with a bigger screen and battery.

Then in order to keep using the same iCloud features with my iPhone I had to upgrade to iOS 8, which broke my phone since the battery was so low. So 6 months later I also bought a new iPhone to go with my new iPad and it was neat because I could use only one type of charger again. Then this iOS7 device (the iPad Mini) started to struggle hard with storage and performance around 3 years of life, and by year 4 it was like a brick.

Then phones started getting bigger and it was like you had a small tablet anyway. The iPad was a consumer machine, you would get the app for your streaming subscription, maybe eBooks and it was nice to read stuff. But 4 years out of it?

So how am I ever going to justify paying 600 to 900 euros for an iPad again? Did they make it not suck? NO! Instead they segmented the form factor in all those Pro, Air, Lite, Mini, making one that's great, with surround sound 4 speakers, two cameras, etc. Then they drove the price up for no reason. Then they started their scheme to say "no to you" to anyone who wanted back on the iPad train and didn't have 800 to fork out.

Those screens are still non-laminated in 2026. On a giant tablet.

Then they made iPads with Mac chips, or Macs with iPad chips, whatever.

So just get a Mac.
A Mac is forever and it just works.
 
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