The $599 Powerhouse Apple just upended the budget laptop market with the MacBook Neo. At $599—or $499 for students—it represents a seismic shift in how we value entry-level hardware. This isn't just another incremental update; it’s a strategic play to dominate the space currently held by plastic Windows laptops and Chromebooks. By repurposing mobile silicon, Apple has created a machine that feels premium despite its price point. iPhone Silicon in a Mac Chassis The heart of the Neo is the A18 Pro chip, the same silicon found in the iPhone 16 Pro. While critics might scoff at a phone chip powering a macOS device, the benchmarks tell a different story. It rivals the original M1 chip in multi-core performance and edges close to the M3 in single-core tasks. This efficiency allows Apple to use a smaller, cheaper lithium-ion battery while still delivering nearly a full day of real-world usage. Premium Feel, Budget Sacrifices Apple didn't compromise on the aluminum chassis, providing the signature rigidity and "one-finger" hinge balance found in their high-end Pro models. The trackpad remains best-in-class. However, the budget constraints are visible in the 13-inch LCD, which lacks the P3 color gamut, and the keyboard, which lacks a backlight. The 8GB of RAM relies heavily on SSD swap memory to handle multitasking, a trade-off that works for now but may show age as storage fills up. The Verdict for Every User For students and writers, this is an easy recommendation. It handles web browsing, word processing, and light 4K video editing in Final Cut Pro with surprising grace. While photographers and hardcore editors will hit a wall with the display and thermal throttling during heavy plugin use, the Neo provides 90% of the MacBook Air experience for a fraction of the cost. It is quite simply the easiest laptop to recommend in years.
A18 Pro
Products
TL;DR
Marques Brownlee (3 mentions) references the A18 Pro chip in videos like "Macbook Neo Review: Better than you Think!", comparing its power to other processors.
- Mar 10, 2026
- Aug 29, 2025
- Feb 5, 2025