After years of rumors, Apple has finally taken the wraps off its new entry-level notebook. In some ways, the MacBook Neo is exactly what we expected, but in others, it’s not. I’ve been excited about this rumor for a long time, since it’s been a while Apple has done anything new and unusual in the Mac line.
![]()
The Neo certainly checks both of those boxes.
What’s in a Name?
I think everyone was betting the company would use the “MacBook” name for a third time, but instead we’ve all got to contend with “MacBook Neo.” I don’t love it, but I don’t hate it either, and I assume it will fade into the background like many other of Apple’s weird product names.1
Sorry, Lovers of Tiny Laptops
The MacBook Neo is no 12-inch PowerBook G4 or 11-inch MacBook Air, but its 13-inch display is smaller than the current entry-level MacBook Air, which sports a 13.6-inch screen.
However, size is about more than screen real estate, and that’s where things get a bit weird:
| Model: | Weight: | Thickness: | Width: | Depth: |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neo | 2.7 pounds | .50 inch | 11.71 inches | 8.12 inches |
| 13-inch Air | 2.7 pounds | .44 inch | 11.97 inches | 8.46 inches |
In short, the MacBook Neo is slightly thicker than the MacBook Air, but will take up slightly less space on a desk. In a bag, it’s gonna feel exactly the same.
I know there are folks who desire a truly tiny MacBook, but for this machine, I think a 13-inch display is about right. The Neo is going to be used in schools, by college students, and by other budget-sensitive consumers. While some nerds see a smaller screen as a desirable feature, many would consider it a penalty of buying a cheaper product.
iPhone Inside
Inside, the MacBook Neo is powered by an A18 Pro with a 6‑core CPU (2 performance cores and 4 efficiency cores) and 8 GB of RAM. It has a 5-core GPU, down a core from the A18 Pro that was in the iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max.
There are no options in terms of additional cores or unified memory. In fact, these are the only options when ordering:
- 256 GB SSD without Touch ID
- 512 GB SSD with Touch ID for $100 more
The 8 GB of unified memory is a limitation of the A18 Pro. I assume future versions of the MacBook Neo will have more RAM; the A19 Pro comes with 12 GB.
I suspect some buyers will jump to the MacBook Air just for more RAM, and I think Apple is more than fine with that.
Apple’s chip choice here shows just how far Apple silicon has come in recent years. A SoC designed for a phone is enough to power a full-blown macOS computer. We’ve known this to be the case based on Geekbench scores for a while, as Jason Snell wrote last year:
The A18 Pro is 46% faster than the M1 in single-core tasks, and almost identical to the M1 on multi-core and graphics tasks. If you wanted to get rid of the M1 MacBook Air but have decided that even today, its performance characteristics make it perfectly suitable as a low-cost Mac laptop, building a new model on the A18 Pro would not be a bad move.
Seeing this come to fruition is exciting, and I suspect this machine will be plenty fast for years to come.
Of course, numbers like this have caused pain for fans of a certain Mac model, including John Siracusa:
The A18 Pro in the MacBook Neo is 19% faster than the M2 Ultra in the Mac Pro in single-core performance (Geekbench 6).
The MacBook Neo starts at $599.
The Mac Pro, which is still for sale, starts at $6,999.
Will the MacBook Neo be powerful enough for everyone? Absolutely not. But will it be powerful for million and millions of macOS users? Absolutely.
That’s not say the Neo doesn’t come with a serious list of compromises. To hit the price point, Apple had to make some hard choices.
For the most part, I think the cuts it made make sense, even if the lack of a backlit keyboard hurts me in a way I find it hard to describe.
Pricing & Positioning
I love the giant price gap between the Neo and the Air.
It means Apple has not repeated the mistakes of the past. The 12-inch MacBook cost $1299 when it debuted back in 2015. The 13-inch MacBook Air could be picked up for $999 for a better CPU, less storage, and with a much worse screen. Then, in 2016, the two-port MacBook Pro showed up and really muddied the waters at $1499.
It was a mess, and I spent hours of my life complaining about it on podcasts.
The price not only separates this machine from the Air, but it also speaks to how consumers should think about this machine. It has (many) fewer features, a (slightly) smaller display, and a (somewhat) less-powerful processor than the Air, which is then a rung below the MacBook Pro. Everything is nice and neat.
Instead of thinking about the MacBook Neo in the framework of the old 12-inch MacBook, I think it’s more useful to think about it in relation to the old M1 MacBook Air. Quinn Nelson said it well:
The MacBook Neo is basically the Walmart M1 MacBook Air. But new and colorful.
Their specs are a bit different: Neo has a better webcam, display, CPU/NPU. M1 Air had a better GPU, battery, a Force Touch trackpad.
Both had 8GB memory.
Both had 256GB storage.
Both were $599.
This is a Mac made for the masses, not the power user, which is very exciting. Just look at how hard Apple pushes the integration between the Mac and the iPhone on the Neo’s various product pages.
Colors!
I cannot believe it’s taken 900 words to get to the colors the MacBook Neo comes in:
![]()
From left to right, Apple calls these colors Silver, Blush, Citrus, and Indigo. I think the Citrus and Indigo are fun options, and I suspect Blush will sell very well.
I am disappointed that they are not as vibrant or wide-ranging as the colors found on the iMac:
![]()
Then there’s the colors found on other Apple products. I mean, Cosmic Orange IS RIGHT THERE, APPLE. COME ON.
I would love to see Apple turn these colors over annually like they do with the iPhone. The Neo should be super responsive to fashionable colors. Even though I wanted more, I will say a nice touch is the color-matched keyboard, seen here in Blush:
![]()
I Ordered One
For the last several years, my only Mac has been a 14-inch MacBook Pro, used with an external display at my desk. If I want to work elsewhere, I can eject a couple of drives, grab my laptop, and be on my way. It’s great
However, there are times when I need a Mac, but do not want my expensive MacBook Pro with all of my work data on it. I often want to just do some browsing downstairs after work or take a laptop to a meeting at church or at one of my kids’ school.
A couple of years ago, I bought an entry-level M3 MacBook Air for running — and taking screenshots of — beta versions of macOS during the summer. Over the last six months or so, it’s also become the laptop I use outside of work.
I’ve ordered a Citrus model with the 512 GB SSD and Touch ID to slot into this space in my life, and I can’t wait to get my hands on it next week. If it goes well, the M3 Air will go to a family member in need of an upgrade. If not, I’ll still be happy to spend time with — and review! — the most interesting new Mac in years.
- I’m old enough to remember when people were freaked out about “MacBook Pro.” ↩