MacBook Neo

Ultraportable laptop computer by Apple From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The MacBook Neo is a laptop in the MacBook series that is developed and manufactured by Apple. It is the first Mac to use an A-series chip found in the iPhone rather than the M-series chips found in other Apple silicon Macs. The MacBook Neo is positioned as the entry-level MacBook, situated below the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro. It was first announced on March 4, 2026, and released on March 11, 2026. As of April 2026, it is the cheapest laptop sold by Apple, with a starting price of US$599 for regular buyers and US$499 for those who qualify for education pricing.

DeveloperApple
Product familyMacBook
TypeLaptop
ReleasedMarch 11, 2026 (47 days ago) (2026-03-11)
Quick facts Developer, Product family ...
MacBook Neo
Citrus and Blush devices on display in a retail setting
DeveloperApple
Product familyMacBook
TypeLaptop
ReleasedMarch 11, 2026 (47 days ago) (2026-03-11)
Operating systemmacOS
System on a chipApple A18 Pro
Memory8GB LPDDR5X-7500
Storage
  • 256GB
  • 512GB
Display2408 × 1506 Liquid Retina
IPS display
Marketing target
Predecessor12-inch MacBook
Related
Websiteapple.com/macbook-neo
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Overview

Apple introduced the MacBook Neo as part of its March 2026 product launches on March 4, 2026.[1] It has been posited that the strategy behind the MacBook Neo is as an entry-level laptop aimed at mainstream users and students. [2][3] According to an Apple marketing executive, the name "MacBook Neo" was chosen to feel fun, friendly, and fresh.[4]

The MacBook Neo is the lowest priced laptop that Apple has ever sold, with a starting price of US$599 or US$499 for those who qualify for education pricing, such as college students and school staff of all grade levels.[5] Pre-orders began at launch, with general release beginning on March 11, 2026.[2][6]

The MacBook Neo's name and model identifier (A3404) was accidentally revealed a day early by Apple when regulatory documents for the MacBook Neo were published on Apple's website.[7][8]

Specifications

Design

A Blush-colored MacBook Neo

The MacBook Neo features an aluminum body design like the MacBook Air models,[9] a Liquid Retina display with black, uniform bezels. It is the first MacBook to have a notchless display since the 13-inch MacBook Pro in 2022. The Neo is available in four colors: Silver, Blush, Citrus, and Indigo.[10] The keyboard and feet are color-matched to the chassis.[11]

More information Color, Name ...
Color Name Description
Silver
Blush Light pink
Citrus Golden yellow
Indigo Dark blue
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Hardware

A view of the left-hand side of the device (from left to right): USB 10Gbps port, USB 2.0 port, phone audio connector (3.5 mm) and speaker. The right-hand side has only a speaker.

The MacBook Neo features a 13-inch Liquid Retina display with a resolution of 2408 × 1506 and has a 218 ppi pixel density. It has two USB-C ports (one USB 10Gbps port with support for DisplayPort 1.4, and one USB 2.0 port), a headphone jack, Wi-Fi 6E, and Bluetooth 6.[6] It uses the Apple A18 Pro SoC (previously used on the iPhone 16 Pro),[10] and has 8 GB of unified memory (not upgradeable), shared between the six CPU cores (two performance, four efficiency) and five GPU cores. It is the first publicly available Mac released with an A-series SoC rather than an M-series SoC since the transition to Apple silicon.[a][1] The 256 GB base models ships without Touch ID, with a lock button in place of the fingerprint scanner. The 512 GB model includes Touch ID.[10] It can run one 4K display at 60 Hz (such as Apple's Studio Display at a scaled resolution).[13]

Because the Apple A18 Pro is an efficient low-power SoC, the MacBook Neo relies on passive fanless cooling and runs completely silently.[14]

Performance

Early performance tests done by Digital Trends show that the MacBook Neo outperforms the M1 MacBook Air with Geekbench 6 results, scoring 3,461 points in single-core and 8,668 points in multi-core tests, with a Metal score of 31,286 points in graphics benchmarks.[15] The MacBook Neo also outperforms the iPad Air M3 in single-core tests.[15]

The photographer and video editor Tyler Stalman tested the MacBook Neo during professional workflows and concluded that "Editing 4K video on this computer is totally fine, even with every other app running."[16]

Technical specifications

More information Model, Basic info ...
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  1. 5K at 60 Hz is equivalent to 4K at 100 Hz, 6K at 60 Hz is equivalent to 4K at 144 Hz, 8K at 60 Hz is equivalent to 4K at 240 Hz

Software

The MacBook Neo initially shipped with macOS Tahoe 26.3. A day-one update, 26.3.2, was released exclusively over-the-air for the MacBook Neo on March 10, 2026.[17][18]

Repairability

A report by iFixit found that the MacBook Neo is Apple's most repairable laptop in 14 years, highlighted with a screwed-down battery tray, lack of parts pairing, screwed-down keyboard, and modular ports and speakers.[19]

Timeline

Timeline of portable Macintoshes
Mac transition to Apple siliconiMac ProApple WatchiPadiPhoneMac ProPower Mac G5Power Mac G4Power Mac G3Power MacintoshCompact MacintoshMacBook NeoMacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Air (Apple silicon)MacBook Air (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Air (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Air (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)12-inch MacBookMacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Air (Intel-based)MacBook Air (Intel-based)MacBook (2006–2012)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook (2006–2012)MacBook Air (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook (2006–2012)PowerBook G4PowerBook G4PowerBook G4iBook G4iBook G4PowerBook G4iBook (white)iBook (white)iBook ClamshelliBook ClamshellPowerBook G3PowerBook G3PowerBook G3PowerBook 3400cPowerBook 1400PowerBook 2400cPowerBook 500 seriesPowerBook 5300PowerBook 190PowerBook DuoPowerBook 500 seriesPowerBook 500 seriesPowerBook 500 seriesPowerBook 500 seriesPowerBook 150PowerBook DuoPowerBook DuoPowerBook 160PowerBook 140PowerBook DuoPowerBook DuoPowerBook 180PowerBook 180PowerBook 160PowerBook 160PowerBook 140PowerBook Duo 230PowerBook Duo 210PowerBook 170PowerBook 140PowerBook 100Macintosh Portable

Notes

  1. The first Mac to use an A-series SoC was the Developer Transition Kit with the Apple A12Z Bionic. It was only available for developers to assist with the Mac transition to Apple silicon.[12]

References

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