Apple is gearing up to update its everyday laptop with a new M5 chip in early 2026. This isn’t a radical redesign. Think of it as the MacBook Air most people already know, only with a noticeable jump in power under the hood and a few spec tweaks that matter for performance and real-world use. The external look isn’t expected to change much from the current Air you see in stores today.
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Release Date and Announcement
Apple has confirmed a Special Apple Experience on March 4, 2026 in New York (with events in London and Shanghai as well). That event is widely believed to include new Macs like the M5 MacBook Air alongside other products.
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That doesn’t guarantee retail availability immediately, but reports point to early 2026, likely March or the first half of the year, for launch and sales.
What’s New Under the Hood
Chip and Performance
Let’s break down the big change: the M5 chip. This is the next step in Apple Silicon’s evolution. Based on Apple’s latest 3-nanometer process, the M5 boosts performance and efficiency over the M4. Rumors and benchmarks point to around a 10–15% jump in CPU speed and significant graphics uplift compared with the M4 Air.
The M5 also improves memory bandwidth and should handle on-device AI tasks better, a part of Apple’s broader push into AI features.
Memory, Storage, and Features
We expect multiple memory and storage options: the base configurations should start with 16GB of unified memory and likely offer 24GB or more on higher tiers. Storage will again range from 256GB up to larger SSDs depending on the model.
Other core parts of the machine, like the 13-inch and 15-inch display sizes, Liquid Retina screen, Thunderbolt 4 ports, and Center Stage webcam, should carry over from the current Air lineup without major revision.
Design and Build
Apple isn’t expected to change the MacBook Air’s chassis for this generation. The thin, wedge-shaped aluminum body that’s been in use for the last few years is likely to stay. That means comparable thickness, weight, and overall style, just with the new silicon inside.
Pricing Expectations
Reports suggest Apple will hold pricing close to what the current M4 MacBook Air starts at, around $999 in the U.S. for the base 13-inch model. It’s possible Apple could keep the old M4 machines around at a lower price while the M5 replaces them at the familiar lineup price.
There’s no official price yet, and geopolitical factors like tariffs could shift final costs, but overall, a similar starting point seems likely.
We don’t have official specs from Apple yet, and things like exact battery life figures, color options, or subtle feature upgrades (like new display tweaks or port changes) aren’t confirmed. Pricing outside the U.S. also hasn’t leaked in a reliable way yet.
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