Apple’s new $599 MacBook Neo and $599 iPad Air (M4) sit at the same entry price, but they replace a laptop in very different ways, because one runs macOS with a built-in keyboard and trackpad, while the other runs iPadOS with a touchscreen-first workflow that becomes “laptop-like” only after you add a keyboard case.
If you want the short version, MacBook Neo wins as a straightforward laptop replacement at $599, while iPad Air (M4) wins on performance headroom and tablet flexibility, but only if you accept the extra cost of Apple’s Magic Keyboard, which pushes the bundle close to $900.
MacBook Neo vs iPad Air M4 as a laptop replacement
| Spec / Cost | MacBook Neo (base) | iPad Air 11-inch (M4) base | iPad Air (M4) + Magic Keyboard | iPad (A16) + Magic Keyboard Folio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starting price | $599 | $599 | $868 ($599 + $269) | $598 ($349 + $249) |
| Chip | A18 Pro | M4 | M4 | A16 |
| RAM | 8GB | 12GB | 12GB | Apple doesn’t list it on the spec sheet, but USB and display limits are pretty straightforward |
| Storage (base) | 256GB | 128GB | 128GB | 128GB |
| OS | macOS | iPadOS | iPadOS | iPadOS |
| Ports | 2× USB-C (1× USB 3 up to 10Gb/s + DisplayPort, 1× USB 2 up to 480Mb/s) + 3.5mm | 1× USB-C (USB 3 up to 10Gb/s + DisplayPort) | Same, plus pass-through charging on the keyboard | 1× USB-C (USB 2 up to 480Mb/s + DisplayPort) |
| External display | DisplayPort over USB-C (Apple positions it for external display use; details vary by display) | 1 external display up to 6K at 60Hz | Up to 6K at 60Hz | 1 external display up to 4K at 60Hz |
| Battery claim | Up to 16 hours video streaming | Apple and retailers commonly list around 10 hours for iPad Air class devices | Same | Similar “all-day” iPad usage expectations (varies by workload) |
What actually decides “better laptop replacement”
1) App compatibility and workflow
If your “laptop replacement” means desktop-grade apps, full browser behavior, and fewer platform edge cases, macOS still gives you the most predictable experience day to day. That matters for workloads like:
- finance and accounting workflows that depend on desktop Excel behaviors
- specialized corporate apps or legacy web tools that behave better on desktop browsers
- heavy multitasking across many windows, files, and external peripherals
This is why a lot of students and professionals still default to a laptop even when iPad hardware feels fast enough.
2) Keyboard and trackpad quality at the price you want to pay
At $599, MacBook Neo already includes the things most people mean by “laptop”: a solid keyboard, a trackpad, and a clamshell design that works on your lap.
With iPad Air, you can absolutely get a laptop-like setup, but if you want Apple’s trackpad experience, you typically end up buying the Magic Keyboard, and Apple prices the 11-inch iPad Air Magic Keyboard at $269, which pushes the bundle to $868.
If you want the “keyboard + trackpad included” idea under $600, the cleanest Apple option is the $349 iPad (A16) plus the $249 Magic Keyboard Folio, totaling $598, but you accept weaker performance and slower USB transfer speeds.
3) Multitasking improvements in iPadOS 26 help, but they do not erase the gap
iPadOS 26 introduced a more flexible windowing system where you can resize and move app windows more freely, which helps the iPad feel closer to a laptop when you use a keyboard and trackpad.
That said, a better window manager does not automatically fix app feature gaps, especially in “work” apps where iPad versions still behave differently than desktop versions, so your specific apps still decide the outcome more than the OS marketing does.
Which one should you pick
Pick MacBook Neo if you want a laptop replacement that stays simple at $599. It makes sense when you care most about:
- macOS software compatibility and fewer workflow surprises
- a built-in keyboard and trackpad with no accessory shopping
- longer claimed battery for video streaming compared with typical iPad usage claims
Pick iPad Air (M4) if you want the most flexible device, and you are fine paying “real laptop money” once you add the keyboard. It makes sense when you care most about:
- using it as a tablet part of the day, with Pencil support and cameras that suit scanning and quick captures
- stronger performance headroom from the M4-class platform
- external display support up to 6K at 60Hz
Pick iPad (A16) + Magic Keyboard Folio if you want iPad versatility with a trackpad under $600. It makes sense when:
- budget is hard-capped under $600 and you still want a trackpad
- you can live with USB 2 transfer speeds and weaker overall performance
Final Verdict
For most people asking “better laptop replacement,” the answer stays boring: MacBook Neo replaces a laptop more cleanly at $599 because the full package already behaves like a laptop, while iPad Air (M4) becomes the better “do-everything” machine only after you accept the accessory cost and confirm your must-have apps work the way you need on iPadOS.