Apple’s $599 MacBook Neo has turned into the kind of hit Apple usually wants, but its success now creates a pricing problem. Demand has pushed Apple to raise production plans, while higher chip and DRAM costs threaten the low price that made the laptop so attractive in the first place.
The Neo’s appeal is easy to understand. It gives students, families, and Chromebook buyers a real Mac at a price that does not feel out of reach. That matters because the $599 model opened macOS to buyers who would normally pick a low-end Windows laptop or a ChromeOS machine instead.
Apple underestimated demand
Apple has already admitted that the MacBook Neo is supply-constrained, and CEO Tim Cook addressed the issue during the company’s April 30 investor call.
“Right now we’re supply-constrained on the MacBook Neo. We were very bullish on the product before announcing it, but we under-called the level of enthusiasm that would be with it.”
Tim Culpan reports that Apple now wants suppliers to prepare for around 10 million MacBook Neo units, nearly double the original estimate of 5 million to 6 million. That decision keeps the product in customers’ hands, but it also changes the economics behind the laptop.
The cheap chips are running out
The first MacBook Neo batch reportedly used downbinned A18 Pro chips originally meant for the iPhone 16 Pro. These chips had one GPU core disabled, which matched the Neo’s advertised five-core GPU setup and helped Apple control costs.
That trick does not work forever. Apple now needs TSMC to produce a new batch of A18 Pro chips for extra Neo units. Many of those chips will likely be fully functional, which means Apple still ships them with one GPU core turned off, but pays more than it did for the earlier downbinned stock.
At the same time, DRAM prices have climbed, which puts more pressure on the Neo’s bill of materials.
The $599 model now looks vulnerable
Culpan suggests Apple could remove the base 256GB MacBook Neo and keep the $699 512GB model as the new entry point. Apple recently used a similar move with the Mac mini, where the cheaper 256GB version disappeared and the higher-storage model remained.
That would protect margins, but it would also weaken the strongest part of the Neo story. The $599 price made the laptop feel different from every other MacBook. A $699 starting price still looks competitive, but it no longer carries the same shock value.
Apple could also keep the current lineup and accept lower margins for now, especially if the Neo brings more users into the macOS ecosystem. Either way, the next few months will show whether Apple treats the $599 Neo as a permanent entry Mac or a launch-window advantage that became too expensive to keep.
Just wait for Apple mini Neo.