Apple looks set to ship three MacBook product updates in early 2026, based on the most consistent reporting so far: a new MacBook Air, refreshed MacBook Pro models with higher-end M5 chips, and a brand-new lower-cost “MacBook” that sits under the Air.
That headline number is easy. The confusing part is how many actual machines can translate into once you count sizes and chip tiers.
3 MacBook families, about 7 main variants
If the early-2026 plan holds, you can expect:
- MacBook Air: 2 sizes (13-inch and 15-inch)
- MacBook Pro: 2 sizes (14-inch and 16-inch) and 2 chip tiers (M5 Pro and M5 Max) for 4 core combinations
- New lower-cost MacBook: 1 size (reported as 12.9-inch)
Total: 3 product lines and roughly 7 headline variants (2 + 4 + 1) before Apple even gets into storage and memory configurations.
Keep one key detail in mind: Apple already launched a 14-inch MacBook Pro with the base M5 chip in October 2025. Early 2026 is widely framed as the moment Apple adds the missing Pro and Max tiers and rounds out the lineup.
What’s Coming, Model by Model
1) MacBook Air (M5): the mainstream upgrade
The MacBook Air remains Apple’s volume laptop, and the early-2026 update reads like a classic Air refresh: a new chip, same shape, and familiar size options.
What the reporting points to:
- Chip: M5
- Sizes: 13-inch and 15-inch
- Design: expected to stay the same
- Timing: often framed around February to March 2026
What’s for buyers: If you already own an M4 Air, this sounds like a modest step. If you are on an M2 Air or older, the M5 Air is the cleaner upgrade because you also benefit from the newer platform baseline, not just raw speed.
Buying note: If you need a laptop for school, work, and travel, the Air is still the safest pick. Apple tends to keep the Air simple, and simple tends to age well.
2) MacBook Pro: the “real” M5 Pro and M5 Max models
Apple’s October 2025 MacBook Pro update covered the base M5 system, but not the Pro-tier and Max-tier silicon. Early 2026 is where those missing pieces are expected to land.
What’s expected:
- Models: 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro
- Chips: M5 Pro and M5 Max
- Focus: performance uplift, with design largely unchanged
That maps to four straightforward combinations:
- 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro
- 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Max
- 16-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro
- 16-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Max
What’s for buyers: If you do video work, 3D, heavy coding, or you simply run demanding workflows all day, the Pro and Max chips are usually the real reason to buy a MacBook Pro. Early 2026 is likely when those buyers finally get their M5 generation option set.
One more thing to track: several outlets keep pointing to a bigger MacBook Pro redesign later in 2026 or into 2027, which makes early-2026 models feel like a “chip-first” cycle. If you want the next chassis and display shift, you may end up waiting.
3) A new low-cost “MacBook”: the wildcard
The most interesting early-2026 rumor is not a Pro machine. It is a cheaper laptop that might simply be called “MacBook,” positioned below the Air.
Commonly cited details include:
- Display size: 12.9-inch
- Chip: A18 Pro, an iPhone-class processor
- Colors: reports mention brighter options like silver, blue, pink, and yellow
- Price talk: some reporting floats $599 to $699
If Apple ships this, it addresses a long-standing gap: a true entry-level Mac that competes with cheap Windows laptops and Chromebooks without dragging the MacBook Air downmarket.
The big question: software positioning. An A-series chip in a MacBook would be a major story for developers and performance expectations, even if Apple aims it at casual users. Right now, the rumor set is strong on broad intent and lighter on confirmed technical limits.
A Simple Buying Guide for Early 2026
Buy the MacBook Air (M5) if you want:
- a light daily laptop for writing, browsing, school, and office apps
- strong battery life and quiet performance
- the best balance of price and portability
Buy the MacBook Pro (M5 Pro or M5 Max) if you need:
- sustained performance for long exports, builds, and heavy multitasking
- more headroom for pro apps and bigger workloads
- 14-inch or 16-inch sizing with higher-end silicon
Wait for the low-cost MacBook if you want:
- the cheapest new Mac Apple sells
- a simple laptop for home, kids, or light work
- a smaller size and bright color options
Summary
If you are counting product lines, three MacBooks look set for early 2026: MacBook Air (M5), MacBook Pro (M5 Pro and M5 Max), and a new low-cost MacBook.
If you are counting the main size and chip variants that most buyers compare on a store page, you are looking at roughly seven headline variants, including the two Air sizes, the four Pro size-and-chip combinations, and the single new low-cost model.
The smart move is simple: decide whether you care more about portability, peak performance, or lowest price, then pick the MacBook that matches that one priority.