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

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster


The MacBook Air is Apple's most popular laptop – a thin, fanless machine that wields quiet power thanks to the efficiency of Apple silicon. While the M4 model isn't exactly old, attention is already turning to its successor.

macbook-air-prime-day-2025.jpeg

Apple doesn't telegraph new product launches ahead of time, but we can draw a surprisingly clear picture of what to expect by looking at Apple's silicon roadmap, release cycles, and past upgrades.

Release Timing and Price

Apple appears to have settled into a spring refresh cycle for the 13-inch and 15-inch MacBook Air. After releasing the M2 model in mid-2022 with an all-new design, Apple skipped 2023 and then delivered back-to-back M3 and M4 MacBook Air updates in March 2024 and March 2025, respectively.

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

Processor Upgrade

3nm-apple-silicon-feature.jpg

The M5 series is expected to feature an enhanced ARM architecture and is reportedly being manufactured using TSMC's advanced 3-nanometer process technology. Apple's decision to forgo TSMC's more advanced 2nm process for the M5 chip is believed to be due to cost considerations.

Recent leaked benchmarks – allegedly from a next-gen iPad Pro running an M5 chip – show single-core scores around 4,133 and multi-core scores around 15,437. That's roughly a 12-15% jump over the current 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.

As a result, the M5 MacBook Air will likely feel more responsive in daily use, particularly in single-threaded tasks, but it won't dramatically outpace the M4 for sustained workloads like video rendering.

Display and Other Possible Changes

Apple-MacBook-Air-hero.jpg
M4 MacBook Air in Sky Blue, the color Apple debuted earlier this year

Apple tends to stick with the same industrial design for multiple chip generations. The current MacBook Air design (introduced with the M2 model) is only three years old and shows no signs of ageing. Expect the same 13- and 15-inch sizes, the same fanless aluminium unibody, and similar display technology – that means no OLED, which Apple appears to be saving for initial adoption in the MacBook Pro line, possibly later this year or in 2027.

If there are any physical changes, they'll likely be subtle. Think improved webcam quality, or tweaks to accommodate the next generation of wireless connectivity (such as Wi-Fi 7 or Bluetooth LE Audio). You never know – Apple could even offer the machine in a new color, just like it did this earlier year with the M4.

Looking Further Ahead

According to reports out of Korea, Apple plans to release a MacBook Air with an improved LCD display in 2027, featuring Oxide TFT technology instead of the current amorphous silicon (a-Si) panels.

The new display technology is said to be a significant upgrade over current MacBook Air screens. Oxide TFT LCD panels offer better power efficiency and improved performance compared to traditional a-Si displays, resulting in sharper images, smoother scrolling, and enhanced battery life.

The transition to Oxide TFT technology should also mean faster pixel response times and more consistent brightness across the screen. In practical terms, this should translate to reduced motion blur when watching videos or gaming, and more uniform lighting without the "clouding" effect sometimes visible on current LCD displays.

Article Link: M5 MacBook Air: Release Date, Features, and Performance Predictions
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Z-4195
I don't understand why the article talks of the M5 chip as if we don't know the details, whereby we do know what M5 is - it is already available on MacBook Pro. It will be the same M5 chip. It always is.
I guess it might be an old article being partially updated with an estimated release date, or just erroneously republished.
I would also find it a bit odd that Apple updates the Air to M5 before the rest of the range.
 
  • Like
Reactions: KeithBN and Elwe
I said it, I'll say it again, 60hz nowadays is shameful, even more so at this price point

As an aside, M chips have been getting hotter and hotter after each iteration, to the point where I'm not sure if passive cooling will suffice

I don’t know why there is a difference, but I can’t see screen refresh differences on a MacBook. I can easily see it on a phone; I don’t care about it, but I can’t easily and immediately see it..but my MBP vs an Air, I couldn’t tell you which had the higher rate.
 
"Oxide TFT LCD panels offer better power efficiency and improved performance compared to traditional a-Si displays"

It would be nice to know exactly how this efficiency is achieved? Rather than just saying its simply better...
 
  • Like
Reactions: WalsallSaddler
As for pricing, we expect it to remain stable, with the base model sticking with the current entry-level $999 price.
This is unlikely, as there is no way to fit two models of the new A18 Pro MacBook under the MacBook Air if its entry level price remains at $999. The new base MacBook allows the current $999 16/256 MacBook Air price tier to be discontinued and the entry level price to go up to $1199.

This is the pricing I expect.

$799 A18 Pro MacBook 16/256
$999 A18 Pro MacBook 16/512
$1199 M5 MacBook Air 16/512
 
This is unlikely, as there is no way to fit two models of the new A18 Pro MacBook under the MacBook Air if its entry level price remains at $999. The new base MacBook allows the current $999 16/256 MacBook Air price tier to be discontinued and the entry level price to go up to $1199.

This is the pricing I expect.

$799 A18 Pro MacBook 16/256
$999 A18 Pro MacBook 16/512
$1199 M5 MacBook Air 16/512
no way, 13" Macbook Air until oled will remain 999 and the cheap Macbook will have 12gb Ram because of the SoC
 
This is unlikely, as there is no way to fit two models of the new A18 Pro MacBook under the MacBook Air if its entry level price remains at $999. The new base MacBook allows the current $999 16/256 MacBook Air price tier to be discontinued and the entry level price to go up to $1199.

This is the pricing I expect.

$799 A18 Pro MacBook 16/256
$999 A18 Pro MacBook 16/512
$1199 M5 MacBook Air 16/512
$1199 for M5 MBA? The 13" version? then $1399 for the 15" version? Now you're creeping very close to the Pro model.
 
I create 300 megapixel photos on my M4 air.It is fine for compute heavy tasks too.
thats not heavy....or in our terms....i tried just for the sake of testing some medium Maya projects, and it couldnt handle it , not even for more than 2 minutes...so fan-less is not an option for heavy tasks...its just shut down
 
thats not heavy....or in our terms....i tried just for the sake of testing some medium Maya projects, and it couldnt handle it , not even for more than 2 minutes...so fan-less is not an option for heavy tasks...its just shut down

My original point was that I like the fanless aspect of the Air, as it suits my usage, which is evenings in the family room. When I had a previous MacBook, the fan would come on "randomly" and make a racket, which other members of the family found irritating, and so did I. (Sure, I could move to another room, but why be antisocial?).

If you want a laptop with more power, there's a selection of higher-spec'd MacBook Pros. The Air suits a certain audience, that's why we have a choice I guess.
 
$1199 for M5 MBA? The 13" version? then $1399 for the 15" version? Now you're creeping very close to the Pro model.
No I’m not. It’s the exact same $1199 16/512 MacBook Air that exists now with the same pricing distance from the MacBook Pros.

You just get rid of the $999 16/256 MacBook Air and replace it with a 16/512 base MacBook. It’s not a price increase for the MBA line, it’s just changing the entry level price point.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.