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
69,751
41,137


Apple has refreshed both tiers of its MacBook lineup in 2025, first updating the MacBook Air with the M4 chip and now introducing the MacBook Pro with the new M5 chip, so how do the latest models compare?

M2-MBA-vs-M2-MacBook-Pro-Buyers-Guide-Feature.jpg

While the 13- and 15-inch MacBook Air continue to start at $999 and $1,199 respectively, moving to the 14-inch MacBook Pro requires spending at least $400 more. For some buyers, the extra cost is unnecessary; for others, the Pro's hardware advantages meaningfully change the experience in ways the Air cannot match even with higher configurations. Our guide helps to answer the question of how to decide which of these two popular laptops is best for you. Beyond their chips, the key differences are as follows:

MacBook AirMacBook Pro
13.6- or 15.3-inch display14.2-inch display
Slimmer borders around the display
LCD Liquid Retina displayMini-LED Liquid Retina XDR display
60hz refresh rateProMotion for refresh rates up to 120Hz
Up to 500 nits brightnessUp to 1,000 nits brightness and 1,600 nits peak HDR brightness
Nano-texture display option
Passive coolingActive cooling
Two Thunderbolt 4 (USB-C) portsThree Thunderbolt 4 (USB-C) ports
HDMI 2.1 port with support for multichannel audio output
SDXC card slot
13-Inch: Four-speaker sound system
15-Inch: Six-speaker sound system with force-canceling woofers
High-fidelity six-speaker sound system with force-cancelling woofers
Three-mic array with directional beamformingStudio-quality three-mic array with high signal-to-noise ratio and directional beamforming
256GB, 512GB, 1TB, or 2TB of storage512GB, 1TB, 2TB, or 4TB storage
13-Inch: 53.8-watt-hour lithium-polymer battery
15-Inch: 66.5-watt-hour lithium-polymer battery
14-Inch: 72.4-watt-hour lithium-polymer battery
18-hour battery life24-hour battery life
70W or 96W USB-C Power Adapter
Silver, Sky Blue, Starlight, or Midnight color optionsSilver or Space Black color options
13-Inch: Starts at $999
15-Inch: Starts at $1,199
Starts at $1,599
[td]

30W, 35W, or 70W USB-C Power Adapter[/td]


Dimensions are also a key area of difference between the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro. The MacBook Pro is noticeably thicker and heavier than both MacBook Air models:

MacBook Air (13-Inch)MacBook Air (15-Inch)MacBook Pro (14-Inch)
Height0.44 inches (1.13 cm)0.45 inch (1.15 cm)0.61 inches (1.55 cm)
Width11.97 inches (30.41 cm)13.40 inches (34.04 cm)12.31 inches (31.26 cm)
Depth8.46 inches (21.5 cm)9.35 inches (23.76 cm)8.71 inches (22.12 cm)
Weight2.7 pounds (1.24 kg)3.3 pounds (1.51 kg)3.4 pounds (1.55 kg)


With the latest version of the MacBook Pro, Apple is touting the power of the M5 chip. Compared to the M4, it says the M5 is:

  • Up to 15% faster multithreaded CPU performance
  • Up to 30% faster overall graphics performance
  • Up to 45% faster ray tracing performance
  • 27.5% higher unified memory bandwidth

In addition to general performance claims, Apple published a set of specific real-world workload results showing measurable gains in AI-driven applications:

  • 4×+ peak GPU compute performance for AI
  • 3.6× faster time to first token (LLM)
  • 1.8× faster Topaz Video Enhance AI processing
  • 1.7× faster Blender ray-traced rendering
  • 2.9× faster AI speech enhancement in Premiere Pro

Other notable changes compared to the M4 chip in the MacBook Air include:

M4 ChipM5 Chip
Made with TSMC's second-generation 3nm process (N3E)Made TSMC's third-generation 3nm process (N3P)
Based on A18 Pro chip from iPhone 16 ProBased on A19 Pro chip from iPhone 17 Pro
No integrated Neural AcceleratorsIntegrated Neural Accelerator in every GPU core
Metal 3 developer APIsMetal 4 developer APIs with Tensor APIs to program GPU Neural Accelerators
Second-generation ray tracing engineThird-generation ray tracing engine
First-generation dynamic cachingSecond-generation dynamic caching
Shader coresEnhanced shader cores
120 GB/s unified memory bandwidth153 GB/s unified memory bandwidth


Taken as a whole, the M4 MacBook Air continues to represent the most suitable choice for users whose workloads are light to moderate and who value portability and an affordable price over sustained performance. Its starting price of $999, which is frequently reduced further through Apple education pricing and third-party promotions, places it within reach for the majority of buyers. For daily tasks like email, light productivity, browsing, and media consumption, it delivers performance that is effectively indistinguishable from more expensive models. Its thinner chassis, lower weight, and selection of color options also remain important advantages for many.


By contrast, the M5 MacBook Pro exists for those whose work or expected longevity justifies the premium. The combination of a more advanced chip, mini-LED XDR display with ProMotion, active cooling for sustained performance headroom, a dedicated HDMI port with multichannel audio support, an SDXC card slot, a third Thunderbolt port, higher memory ceilings, larger storage opti... Click here to read rest of article

Article Link: M4 MacBook Air vs. M5 MacBook Pro Buyer's Guide
 
  • Love
Reactions: arc of the universe
I'm not going to upgrade from my M3 MBA anytime soon. But if I do, I'll consider the pro.

However, fan noise and lack thereof is absolutely crucial. I love the fanlessness of the MBA.

The MBP will have to be silent in 99% of all daily activities for me to even consider it, akin to the Mac mini for example. I can deal with noise when exporting Lightroom images. Otherwise, not so much.
 
Lighter and silent vs better ports, better cooling, better screen and speakers,( but noisier and heavier).

The price difference isn’t significant when both have the same amount of storage.

So Apple is offering a fair enough choice: it comes down to whether you prioritise silence and portability or slightly better sound and vision. ( that said, both are portable, quiet and have great sound and vision, it’s just one is slightly better on one side and the other is better at the other)

I’d go for the air, but I don’t use a laptop as a desktop replacement / the heart of a workstation.

The 13” MBA is, in my opinion, the best laptop on the market in 2025 if you want a laptop to be “just a laptop” - a highly portable but fully capable computer you will carry around but won’t often have external devices physically connected to it.
 
Last edited:
Now, do M1 Air < M2 Air < M3 Air < M4 Air < M5 Pro. :)

I'm not - really - due for an upgrade, my 2020 M1 Air is still doing everything I need.

Only worry: The camera just stopped working a few weeks ago. Don't know if it's hardware or software failure, but if it's the former it could be the first signs on impending doom... and need for an upgrade... And if so, a "baby" Pro could very well be my preferred option.
 
Now, do M1 Air < M2 Air < M3 Air < M4 Air < M5 Pro. :)

I'm not - really - due for an upgrade, my 2020 M1 Air is still doing everything I need.

Only worry: The camera just stopped working a few weeks ago. Don't know if it's hardware or software failure, but if it's the former it could be the first signs on impending doom... and need for an upgrade... And if so, a "baby" Pro could very well be my preferred option.
Obviously though, choosing between M4 air vs M5 pro is only the main choice until early next year, then it’ll be M5 air vs M5 pro. So, if you can wait, you might as well choose between the same processor in either air or pro cases.
 
Last edited:
I have started using my MBA M3 docked to a larger display 8 hours a day (and as a laptop away from my desk), I’m thinking the Pro with its fan might be better for this in the longterm. But then so would a mini…
 
I'm not going to upgrade from my M3 MBA anytime soon. But if I do, I'll consider the pro.

However, fan noise and lack thereof is absolutely crucial. I love the fanlessness of the MBA.

The MBP will have to be silent in 99% of all daily activities for me to even consider it, akin to the Mac mini for example. I can deal with noise when exporting Lightroom images. Otherwise, not so much.
I have a M2 MacBook Air as a personal device and a M2 Pro MacBook Pro for work. I never hear the fan on the work device. Ever.

Personally I absolutely love the air design. It’s the best Apple has made in decades. I edit videos on my air and it manages them well but I could go a pro. But giving up the form factor of the air would be such a shame I don’t know if I could do it.
 
Obviously though, choosing between M4 air vs M5 pro is only the main choice until early next year, then it’ll be M5 air vs M5 pro. So, if you can wait, you might as well choose between the same processor in either air or pro cases.
Yes, as long as the M1 Air is holding up, the landscape is ever changing...

So, if and when I need an upgrade, I still think it's going to be between a 15" Air, the 14" "baby" Pro and possibly the 14" M* Pro Pro. :)
 
I have started using my MBA M3 docked to a larger display 8 hours a day (and as a laptop away from my desk), I’m thinking the Pro with its fan might be better for this in the longterm. But then so would a mini…
Just my experience - I used Mac Book Pros from 2009 onward as both a laptop and a desktop - as a desktop it had multiple monitors, a DAS and other peripherals.

I wouldn’t do that anymore. When my 2017 MBP ( a very temperamental machine) annoyed me one to many times, I switched to a Mac Mini M2 Pro - a much better experience. The

If you already have the peripherals, even a base level M4 Mac mini will give you a far better experience than a MBA used as “the heart of a workstation”. The M4 minis are shockingly performant boxes. Given their price, I’d strongly recommend getting the mini as a desktop and keep the Air as a portable machine rather than using a MBP for both. You’ll save money and won’t have to plug and unplug devices all the time.
 
Last edited:
It seems to me that everyone who already has a MacBook of any type since M1 is probably not going to be buying the non-Pro M5 MBP.

If you have an Air and want more power, you’re probably looking at the M4 Pro/Max. MBP. If you have a Pro MBP and want a cheap secondary device, you’re probably looking at the sub-1K MBA.

Those who have an Mx MBP/MBA who are tempted by the non-Pro M5 MBP must be a very small market.

This is for those who don’t yet have a MacBook, might be tempted to get one for Christmas, and wants something “new and shiny” - not a “year old chip”. Apple marketing are probably targeting them. Upselling them from the cheaper MBA that they may have been looking at.

After Christmas, the M5 will appear in other products that may tempt the rest of us.
 
It seems to me that everyone who already has a MacBook of any type since M1 is probably not going to be buying the non-Pro M5 MBP.

If you have an Air and want more power, you’re probably looking at the M4 Pro/Max. MBP. If you have a Pro MBP and want a cheap secondary device, you’re probably looking at the sub-1K MBA.

Those who have an Mx MBP/MBA who are tempted by the non-Pro M5 MBP must be a very small market.

This is for those who don’t yet have a MacBook, might be tempted to get one for Christmas, and wants something “new and shiny” - not a “year old chip”. Apple marketing are probably targeting them. Upselling them from the cheaper MBA that they may have been looking at.

After Christmas, the M5 will appear in other products that may tempt the rest of us.
Yep. I’d agree that this is Apple’s thinking - people buy presents before Christmas, if Apple released updated iPad and MacBooks airs before Christmas, they’d sell tonnes of the as presents. If the release them after Christmas, they’ll sell lots of them but will also sell tonnes of their other products before Christmas a well.

there’s another huge company that follows the same strategy: Lego - they remake awe their very expensive “adult” collectible sets immediately AFTER Christmas, not before. Because they’re guaranteed to sell loads of Lego as Christmas presents, irrespective of whether they’re brand new Lego sets or the same sets that have been available throughout the year.
 
Last edited:
Yes, as long as the M1 Air is holding up, the landscape is ever changing...

So, if and when I need an upgrade, I still think it's going to be between a 15" Air, the 14" "baby" Pro and possibly the 14" M* Pro Pro. :)

The MBA is an easy choice as travel companion. But my 13in (16gb) M1 has its limitations so I remain open to persuasion …

However, as my 16in MBP serves as desktop replacement & occasional luggable I’m not so sure I’d abandon the 13in MBA, unless there was a bargain price on a 14in MBP - reckoning that the extra weight was worth the extra features.
 
Great to have options. If I only could have one machine it would be the MBP. However having the luxury of owning multiple I much prefer having a 13" MBA as my travel machine as I value the lighter weight, size and quietness more for that use case. I might even be open to the new MacBook when that gets released if it is even smaller/lighter depending on the specs.
 
Got mbp m4 and m4 air and for some reason pro heats up faster over the same tasks ran on the air even though it has a fan. Love using the air for its portability and doesn't flinch over heavy duty tasks like vscode, womp and gaming on whisky.

The air is a beast, only downside for upcoming m5 air is Tohoe which couldn't be down graded.
 
Now, do M1 Air < M2 Air < M3 Air < M4 Air < M5 Pro. :)

I'm not - really - due for an upgrade, my 2020 M1 Air is still doing everything I need.

Only worry: The camera just stopped working a few weeks ago. Don't know if it's hardware or software failure, but if it's the former it could be the first signs on impending doom... and need for an upgrade... And if so, a "baby" Pro could very well be my preferred option.
Same thing happened w/ my 2017 13" MBP. Camera stopped working one day, for no reason, otherwise a wonderful laptop that was flawless until they stopped supporting it. I even loved the Touch Bar 😉
 
  • Love
Reactions: SFjohn
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.