Apple just introduced the MacBook Neo, a budget-friendly laptop starting under $700. It’s the first MacBook powered by an iPhone chip rather than Apple’s

traditional M-series processors. Understanding what this means for performance, value, and whether it’s right for you requires looking at what the Neo actually offers

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compared to the rest of Apple’s lineup.

The MacBook Neo represents a significant departure from Apple’s traditional MacBook strategy. Instead of using the M-series chips found in MacBook Air and MacBook

Pro, the Neo uses an A18 Pro chip—the same processor that powers the iPhone 17 Pro.

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This choice is intentional. Apple is bringing smartphone processing power to laptops, which allows for aggressive pricing below $700 while maintaining solid performance for

everyday computing tasks. The trade-off is that the Neo lacks the raw power of higher-end MacBooks, but that’s the entire point.

It’s designed for users whose computing needs don’t require expensive pro-level hardware.

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What Makes the MacBook Neo Different

The Neo comes in four colors: Blush, Citrus, Indigo, and Silver. Storage options are 256GB or 512GB. Pre-orders opened March 4, with shipping beginning March 11, 2026.

The MacBook Neo targets a specific audience. If you spend most of your time in web browsers, email, document editing, and casual media consumption,

this laptop handles those tasks without breaking your budget. Students, casual users, and people upgrading from older Windows laptops find genuine value here.

The pricing also matters. At under $700, the Neo undercuts even entry-level Windows laptops with comparable specifications.

For someone needing a Mac for school or basic professional work, the entry price is substantially lower than the MacBook Air, which starts at

$1,099.

Who Should Buy the MacBook Neo

However, if you do any professional creative work—photo editing, video production, music composition, 3D rendering—the Neo isn’t the right machine.

The A18 Pro lacks the sustained performance and specialized capabilities of even the base MacBook Air.

The A18 Pro in the MacBook Neo is essentially an iPhone processor running on a laptop. This creates both advantages and limitations.

Advantage: The chip is incredibly efficient. It handles everyday tasks—web browsing, email, document editing, spreadsheets—with no lag. Applications launch quickly. Switching between apps is smooth. Basic video streaming is effortless.

Performance and Real-World Usage

Limitation: Sustained heavy processing is where the Neo falls short. If you’re exporting video, rendering 3D models, or running complex simulations, the Neo will

complete the task significantly slower than any M-series MacBook. The thermal design prioritizes thinness over cooling capacity, which means intensive tasks can cause thermal

throttling.

For the use cases the Neo targets—student work, general computing, light creative tasks—the A18 Pro is genuinely sufficient.

But it’s important to understand this is not a machine designed to handle professional workflows.

The MacBook Neo uses the same design language as the current MacBook Air: aluminum unibody construction, clean lines, and a minimalist aesthetic.

It’s thinner and lighter than the Air, which actually makes sense given its lower processing power doesn’t generate as much heat.

Design and Display

The display is a 13-inch Retina LCD panel with 2560×1600 resolution. It’s sharp enough for any normal use.

The display isn’t as bright or capable as the Liquid Retina XDR displays on higher-end MacBooks, but for everyday computing, it’s perfectly adequate.

The keyboard and trackpad are the same quality as other current MacBooks, which means they’re excellent. This is important because it’s one area where Apple doesn’t compromise across price tiers.

The MacBook Neo includes two Thunderbolt 4/USB-C ports, which is standard across Apple’s current laptop lineup. This gives you flexibility for charging, external displays, and data transfer.

Ports and Connectivity

The Neo includes WiFi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3 for wireless connectivity. It’s not WiFi 7 like the higher-end M5 MacBooks, but WiFi 6E is perfectly capable for 2026 standards.

Apple claims up to 16 hours of battery life on the MacBook Neo with typical use. This is solid for a budget laptop but

trails the 18+ hours you get from MacBook Air models powered by M-series chips.

The thermal design is designed for silence and thinness rather than peak performance. There’s a single fan that rarely needs to spin up under

normal use. This makes the Neo exceptionally quiet during everyday work. Under heavy load, the thin profile does limit cooling capacity, which is why

the Neo isn’t appropriate for sustained professional work.

Battery Life and Thermal Design

Compared to entry-level Windows laptops in the same price range, the MacBook Neo offers several advantages. Build quality is superior. The display is sharper.

Integration with other Apple devices is seamless if you own an iPhone or iPad.

Compared to the MacBook Air M5, which costs $400 more, the performance difference is substantial. The Air is roughly 3x faster in sustained multi-core

tasks. If you can afford the Air, it’s a better long-term investment. But if your budget is $700, the comparison is irrelevant because you’re

making a choice between the Neo and Windows alternatives.

At $699 for the 256GB model and $799 for 512GB, the MacBook Neo is Apple’s cheapest laptop by a significant margin.

The previous entry-level laptop, the MacBook Air M5, starts at $1,099—a $400 premium.

How It Compares to Alternatives

The question isn’t whether the Neo is good value for a laptop in general. It is. The question is whether you need a MacBook

at all. If you’re primarily working in web applications that run equally well on Windows, you’re essentially paying for the Apple brand and macOS

integration rather than performance advantage.

But if you want macOS and integration with other Apple devices, the Neo provides that at genuinely accessible pricing.

Students saving for college can afford this. Schools can equip classrooms. The entry barrier to the Mac ecosystem drops significantly.

The MacBook Neo makes sense if you’re a student needing a Mac for coursework and general computing.

It makes sense if you’re switching from Windows and want to try macOS without committing $1,000+. It makes sense for casual users who want

the benefits of macOS and Apple’s ecosystem at an entry-level price.

Pricing and Value Proposition

The Neo doesn’t make sense if you do professional creative work, programming involving heavy compilation, or any task requiring sustained heavy processing.

In those cases, you either need a higher-end MacBook or a Windows alternative optimized for your specific work.

The MacBook Neo signals Apple’s willingness to expand the Mac user base by removing the traditional price barrier.

Previously, entering the Mac world required spending over $1,000. The Neo changes that equation.

This likely impacts Windows market share among students and budget-conscious buyers. It also means Apple is betting that users can be satisfied with iPhone-level

processing power for laptop use. For everyday computing, that bet appears sound.

When to Buy the MacBook Neo

The Neo isn’t revolutionary technology. It’s an intelligent product strategy: take proven iPhone hardware, package it for laptop use, price it accessibly, and capture

customers who would otherwise buy Windows machines.

For the right buyer with the right use case, it’s a genuinely useful product at an unprecedented price point for Apple.

Also read:

The Bigger Picture

Sources and Further Reading

Learn more at TechCrunch.

Learn more at The Verge.

Learn more at Wired.

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