Which MacBook should you buy in 2026? I ranked the 5 best Apple laptops for every need

MacBook Air 15-inch M5 on a desk
(Image credit: Tom's Guide)

Ever since I was 16, MacBooks have been my daily driver. 20 years later (and with Apple silicon), these laptops are better than ever!

With that experience and the know-how of reviewing every single MacBook, I'm the guy to help you find the best one for your needs. There are two types to choose from:

  • MacBook Air: The go-to option for everyone that ticks all the boxes for everyday work, light creative work, web browsing and the like in an ultra-thin and light form factor.
  • MacBook Pro: The powerhouse for those who want to get into more demanding work like video editing, coding, music production or even gaming.

The go-to option for everyone right now is the M5 MacBook Air — all-day battery life and even better specs under the hood make it a winner, despite the $100 bump in price.

If you're a creative pro (like me) and need the extra performance, I’d steer you toward either the M5 MacBook Pro or (for the monster GPU to nail professional-grade video edits and AI), the M4 Pro MacBook Pro.

What MacBooks are launching in 2026?

Why you can trust Tom's Guide Our writers and editors spend hours analyzing and reviewing products, services, and apps to help find what's best for you. Find out more about how we test, analyze, and rate.

The last thing I'd ever want you to feel is the FOMO of buying a current generation MacBook — only to see Apple launch a new version just weeks later. To avoid that, here's our expected calendar of upcoming MacBooks.

  • M6 MacBook Pro with OLED touchscreen (Fall 2026): A true generational shift is reportedly coming for the MacBook Pro. Not just moving to the 2nm M6 chip, but also sporting an OLED touchscreen! MacBook Pros normally launch late every year.

The best MacBooks you can buy today

The best MacBook overall

The best MacBook overall

Specifications

Display: 13.6 inches (2560 x 1664)
CPU: Apple M5
GPU: 8-core or 10-core GPU
RAM: 16GB-32GB
Storage: 512GB-2TB SSD
Weight: 2.7 pounds

Reasons to buy

+
Lightweight, durable design
+
Fast M5 performance
+
Epic battery life
+
Gorgeously vivid display

Reasons to avoid

-
Costs $100 more
-
Nominal upgrades over the M4 model
What Our Reviewer Says
Tony Polanco author photo
What Our Reviewer Says
Tony Polanco

The MacBook Air 15-inch M5 offers nice upgrades over the M4 version while keeping the same sleek design, vibrant display, and long battery life. M5 performance impresses, and the doubled 512GB storage and better wireless connectivity are nice bonuses. But as I said, it costs an extra $100 for most of the same features. Still, the MacBook Air M5 is a fantastic laptop for most folks, especially anyone looking for a premium notebook that’s under $1,500.

Read the full review: MacBook Air M5

Who is this for?

This is the go-to MacBook for most folks. Why? The MacBook Air M5 (both the 13- and 15-inch models) brings even faster performance under the hood thanks to M5, which also results in even greater battery life at over 15 hours. That's all wrapped up in the familiar yet fantastic sleek, lightweight design. Aside from those who already have an M4, or even M3, MacBook Air, this is hands down not just the MacBook, but also the laptop to beat.

Why is it the best overall MacBook?

As with its predecessor, the MacBook Air M5 comes out on top because it ticks all the right boxes. Premium performance for a laptop under $1,500 (and even less when those discounts start pouring in)? Check. Faster M5 power for seamless multitasking, especially for web surfing, video editing and even demanding gaming? It's got it. Now offering over 15 hours of battery life, Wi-Fi 7 connectivity and an upgraded 512GB base storage? You know it. It's got it all for most.

What do we like?

👍 Fast M5 performance: In our benchmark tests, the M5 knocked it out of the park in both single- and multi-core performance, allowing for seamless multitasking for multiple tasks.

👍 Even longer battery life: Now boasting a battery life that lasts 15 hours and 30 minutes, the latest MacBook Air delivers one of the longest-lasting laptops around.

👍 Useful upgrades: While its $100 price hike hurts, the Apple N1 wireless chip for Wi-Fi 7 support and boosted 512GB base storage make this MacBook Air better than ever.

What don’t we like?

👎 Prepare to pay more: Sure, the upgrades are useful, but being $100 more for both the 13- and 15-inch models stings, especially when the design hasn't changed at all. Keep an eye out for discounts.

👎 A modest upgrade over M4: This is the same laptop, just with boosted performance. There's a noticeable jump in power, but not enough for an upgrade from M4.

Bottom line

Apple has done it again, making the do-it-all MacBook even better with faster M5 performance, longer battery life, Wi-Fi 7 connectivity and a much-appreciated 512GB base storage. It still boasts the same impressively sleek and lightweight design, making this the MacBook for travelers, students, workers and more.

The best cheap MacBook

The best MacBook for those on a budget

Specifications

Display: 13 inches (2408 x 1506)
CPU: A18 Pro 6‑core CPU
GPU: 5-core GPU
RAM: 8GB
Storage: 256GB-512GB
Weight: 2.7 pounds

Reasons to buy

+
Sturdy aluminum design
+
Surprisingly loud speakers
+
Good A18 Pro performance
+
Long battery life
+
Fun color options

Reasons to avoid

-
Keyboard not backlit
-
Touch ID costs extra
-
No Thunderbolt support
What Our Reviewer Says
mark spoonauer
What Our Reviewer Says
Mark Spoonauer

This system ticks all the right boxes for its low price, with a premium aluminum design, a rich and bright display you’d normally find on $1,000 laptops and good-enough performance from its A18 Pro chip. I also like the side-mounted speakers, as well as the comfy keyboard and smooth touchpad. And the more than 13 hours of battery life is very impressive at this price.

Read the full review: MacBook Neo

Who is this for?

Finally! Instead of picking up one of Apple's older laptops or resorting to a refurbished model (as great as they can be), Apple fills in the gap in its budget laptop section with its MacBook Neo. And this machine offers huge value.

At $599 (and $499 for education), the MacBook Neo is a reliable, sturdy laptop with a fun pop of color for students, workers on the move and anyone after a budget laptop. With its A18 Pro chip onboard, expect solid performance for general, day-to-day tasks, including writing in documents, editing photos, exploring the web and more. If you don't mind a lack of keyboard backlight or no Touch ID (you'll have to pay $100 extra), this MacBook is well worth considering.

Why is this the best budget MacBook?

Just $599? That beats the price of the MacBook Air M2. The Neo's performance is nearly on par with that chip, too, showing just how far Apple's A-series chips (generally made for iPhones) have come. So, instead of paying over $1,000 for a MacBook, you can now get one for a fraction of the price. And a reliable one with plenty of fun colors, too.

What do we like?

👍 Solid A18 Pro performance: Compared to other Chromebooks and Windows machines at the same price, the MacBook Neo outperforms these laptops with good speeds for multitasking and juggling multiple tabs or apps.

👍 Long battery life: Impressively, the MacBook Neo can last 13 hours and 28 minutes, which is more than enough to breeze through a full workday without needing a charger.

👍 Design that pops: Fan of the sleek, lightweight design of the MacBook Air? Well, the MacBook Neo takes the best parts of this (aluminum design included) but adds a splash of colors, making for an attractive laptop that works for the office, classroom and while out and about.

What don’t we like?

👎 Annoying trade-offs: I mean, sacrifices had to be made. Expect to pay $100 extra for Touch ID and double the storage, no keyboard backlight and 8GB of RAM being the limit.

👎 No Thunderbolt support: If you need a laptop with Thunderbolt for speedy data transfer or to connect to peripherals (like a monitor), the MacBook Neo has no such support, so prepare to have a USB-C hub on hand.

Bottom line

The MacBook Neo finally makes Apple's lineup of laptops supremely more affordable, and it's amazing what $599 can get you. If you're looking to get started in macOS but don't want to spend $1,000 or more and only need it for everyday tasks, the MacBook Neo provides.

The best MacBook Pro overall

The best MacBook Pro overall

Specifications

Display: 14.2-inch Liquid Retina XDR display (3024x1964 pixels, 254ppi)
Processor: M5 (10-core CPU)
Graphics: Integrated GPU (10 cores)
Memory: Up to 32GB
Storage: Up to 4TB
Weight: 3.4 pounds
What Our Reviewer Says
Tony Polanco author photo
What Our Reviewer Says
Tony Polanco

The new 14-inch MacBook Pro M5 isn’t a huge upgrade from the MacBook Pro M4, but it’s still one of the finest laptops for power users. I like the powerful M5-driven performance, which can deftly handle my workload and even run Apple silicon-optimized games at smooth frame rates. On top of that, the bright and colorful 14-inch mini-LED display makes everything pop, while the laptop’s relatively thin and light design makes it easy to travel with. It’s the best overall MacBook Pro.

Read the full review: MacBook Pro M5

Who is this for?

Like last year’s model, the MacBook Pro M5 is for power users who want a dependable machine wherever they go. It offers a perfect mix of portability, performance and battery life.

Why is this the best overall MacBook Pro?

The MacBook Pro M5 is the best MacBook Pro because it nails the basics for power users, namely, strong performance, epic battery life and easy to travel with. It offers more ports than a MacBook Air (three Thunderbolt 4 / USB-C, one SD Card slot and an HDMI port). Its 14-inch display size is also in that sweet spot when it comes to easy readability.

What do we like?

👍 Strong M5 performance: The new Apple M5 chip provides a notable performance boost over its predecessor and Windows-based competitors. If you’re a video editor, you can render 4K videos much faster than before, and if you’re into gaming, the new MacBook Pro can also deliver impressive performance for titles that are optimized for M-series Macs.

👍 Vibrant display: Like last year’s model, you can spend an extra $150 for a nano-texture display, which radically reduces screen glare. Trust me, the investment is worth it, especially if you work near a window or outdoors. And as before, everything looks bright and colorful on the 14-inch mini-LED display.

👍 Astonishing battery life: The MacBook Pro M5 is no joke when it comes to battery life. In our testing, the laptop endured for an incredible 18 hours and 14 minutes! The Dell 14 Premium lasted for a comparatively paltry 8 hours and 16 minutes. If you want a laptop that can potentially last for two full work days on a single charge, this is it.

What don’t we like?

👎 A minor spec bump: The MacBook Pro M5 deserves its spot on this list, but it’s a modest spec bump over the MacBook Pro M4. If you have an M3 or older MacBook, then you can consider upgrading. But if you own last year’s 14-inch M4 MacBook Pro, you can skip this M5 model.

Bottom line

The 14-inch MacBook Pro M5 is one of the most powerful and longest-lasting laptops out there. I love its practical design, lovely display and insanely long battery life. The nano-texture display option is also a worthwhile upgrade.

The best big-screen MacBook

The best big-screen MacBook

Specifications

Display: 15.3 inches (2880 x 1864)
CPU: Apple M5
GPU: Integrated 10-core GPU
RAM: 16GB - 32GB
Storage: 512GB - 2TB
Weight: 3.3 pounds

Reasons to buy

+
Lightweight, durable design
+
Fast M5 performance
+
Epic battery life
+
Gorgeously vivid display

Reasons to avoid

-
Costs $100 more
-
Nominal upgrades over the M4 model
What Our Reviewer Says
Tony Polanco author photo
What Our Reviewer Says
Tony Polanco

The 15-inch MacBook Air hits a real sweet spot — offering that spacious, immersive screen without the steep price of the 16-inch MacBook Pro. While it’s not a pro-level video editing machine, the latest M5 chip has no trouble powering through my daily workload and multitasking, and it’s ready for Apple Intelligence, too. Battery life is stellar at over 15 hours, making it a great pick for anyone who needs all-day performance in a slim, silent package. I just wish Apple gave it more than two USB-C ports.

Read the full review: MacBook Air M5 (15-inch)

Who is this for?

This is for the people who have those casual-to-moderate productivity demands, but really want a big screen laptop experience. The M5 chip performs just as well here as the 13-inch, but you’re getting the benefit of a larger display (and bigger battery, too).

Why is this the best big-screen MacBook?

Previously, a giant screen was limited to just the 16-inch MacBook Pro, so a 15-inch Air is warmly welcomed! Put simply, this is the cheapest way to get a MacBook with a large display. But with that, Apple hasn’t forgotten about what makes the Air so great — making it slim, light and incredibly portable.

What do we like?

👍 Stronger M5 performance: The M5 chip proves to be just as snappy in the 15-inch Air as it does in all the other 3-nanometer-armed MacBooks on this list — reaching nearly 15,000 in our Geekbench multi-core testing, and lightning-quick SSD read/write speeds.

👍 Gorgeous display that goes big: You don’t really know how big a 15-inch display will be until you see it. This thing is big. Not only that, but it packs an impressive average brightness of 454 nits and a lot of color, so this is great for both work and binge watching.

👍 Same Air design with one key improvement: What’s even more impressive is the fact that Apple keeps the 15-inch MacBook Air just as slim as the 13-inch at 0.45 inches. For something of this size and stature, that aluminum construction feels almost impossible in the hands.

👍 Incredible battery life: The difference between the 13- and 15-inch models may be slightly less compared to their predecessor, but the latest 15-inch MacBook Air still delivers an amazing 15 hours and 30 minutes.

What we don’t like?

👎 Desk view is awkward to use: With that higher megapixel count and wider field of view, you can use desk view using the MacBook Air's webcam, but it does look a little awkward!

👎 No fan = lower sustained performance: Over a longer period of work or gaming, you’re best off sacrificing an inch of screen size and going for the M5 MacBook Pro, which has a fan to keep the M5 running at 100% for longer.

Bottom line

Regardless of our criticisms of ports and sustained performance, it’s hard to really knock the 15-inch MacBook Air in real-world use. The M5 chip affords impressive power and battery life, and Apple has made the thinnest big-screen laptop you can buy right now.

The best MacBook for power users

The best MacBook for power users

Specifications

Display: 16.2 inches Liquid Retina XDR (3456 x 2234) | 120Hz
CPU: M5 Pro 18-core CPU
GPU: M5 Pro 20-core GPU
RAM: 24GB to 48GB
Storage: 1TB to 2TB
Weight: 4.7 pounds

Reasons to buy

+
Mind-blowing M5 Pro performance
+
Astonishing 21+ hour battery life
+
Beautiful 16.2-inch display
+
Utilitarian design

Reasons to avoid

-
Costs $200 more than last year’s model
-
Incremental upgrades over M4 Pro
What Our Reviewer Says
Tony Polanco author photo
What Our Reviewer Says
Tony Polanco

The MacBook Pro 16-inch M5 Pro is a beast of a laptop for anyone new to Apple or upgrading from older models like the M3 Pro. It's not a revolutionary leap from the M4 Pro, especially considering its $200 price hike, but that M5 Pro chip delivers serious gains and phenomenal battery life. If you need a powerhouse MacBook for heavy video editing, 3D rendering, or optimized gaming, this is the laptop I recommend.

Read the full review: MacBook Pro M5 Pro (16-inch)

Who is this for?

The MacBook Pro M5 Pro 16-inch not only launches laptops into a new realm of performance, but also delivers insanely long battery life. In fact, it’s the longest-lasting laptop we’ve tested to date, at over 21 hours. This one’s for all the creators and power users looking for a mighty, portable machine to take with them on the go, without worrying about battery life.

Why is this the best MacBook for power users?

Just from the benchmarks alone, the MacBook Pro with M5 Pro soars ahead of its competition. M4 Pro is still fast, but the latest chip brings a significant performance bump that makes video editing, coding, creative design work and more faster than ever. While the M5 Max undoubtedly boasts even higher power, this model is the sweet spot between price and performance for most power users.

What do we like?

👍 Speedy M5 Pro performance: The highlight of the latest MacBook Pro is its M5 Pro chipset, and it’s a beast, to say the least. It easily outperforms its competition, and that’s not even talking about the next step up: the M5 Max. Expect to breeze through everyday workloads, edit 4K video faster than ever, utilize on-device AI and more.

👍 Epic battery life: When a laptop reaches nearly a full day of battery life, you know it’s a machine where you can leave the charger at home. Lasting over 21 hours, the 16-inch MacBook Pro M5 Pro is the go-to laptop for work during the day and entertainment at night, whether that be web surfing, streaming videos and gaming.

👍 Gorgeous 16-inch display: No, this isn't any different from the last few MacBook Pro models, but it's hard to deny the sheer brilliance of the M5 Pro's 16.2-inch Liquid Retina Display (3456 x 2234). We go as far as to say it's the best non-OLED screen around. It makes it great for creative work and watching shows.

What don’t we like?

👎 That’s one big price tag: Now, anyone looking to buy a MacBook Pro knows how expensive it will be, but this time, its $200 more. At $2,699, that’s $1,000 more than the 14-inch MacBook Pro M5, so be sure to know exactly what you’ll need this mighty machine for before taking out your wallet.

👎 Not a major upgrade: It's become the norm to expect Apple to deliver more of a spec bump than a revamp to its MacBook Pro lineup. That's okay, as these laptops continue to be fantastic machines, but for anyone waiting for a change in design, or an OLED screen, it's best to wait.

Bottom line

The MacBook Pro 16-inch (M5 Pro, 2026) strikes that balance between being just powerful enough to justify its price tag and being an absolute workhorse, offering the big screen treatment. It may not match the performance of the M5 Max, but it’s certainly more affordable, and for many power users, the M5 Pro offers more than enough performance to power through their intense workloads.

How to choose the best MacBook for you

Performance: The transition to Apple Silicon breathed new life into the MacBook lineup — pairing seriously impressive performance with peak power efficiency and downright bafflingly low operating temperatures (even under max load). Of course, the question of how much of that face-melting speed you need comes down to individual use cases. Not really doing much beyond casual productivity? The MacBook Neo is perfect. Need a little more? Bump up to the M5 Air. If you're a power user with creative tasks, the M5 MacBook Pros are the way to go.

Graphics and gaming: If you want to work by day and play by night on your MacBook, anything with an M4 chip (or above) is the way to go. These 3nm chipsets pack the best GPUs, which enable huge graphical capabilities such as hardware-accelerated ray tracing. Plus, this additional power means you can breeze through graphically intense productivity tasks, too.

Size and weight: If portability is important to you, the MacBook Airs are a must-buy from this selection. From a weight of just 2.7 pounds for the 13-inch version (and a mere 3.3 pounds for the 15-inch), these are so easy to carry around. If portability isn't the biggest concern, you could go all the way up to 4.3 pounds for the 16-inch MacBook Pro. But as far as dimensions go, all of these models are seriously sleek and carryable.

Battery life: The 16-inch M5 Pro MacBook Pro is the longest-lasting MacBook there is, posting a Tom's Guide battery test time of 21 hours and 10 minutes. But the whole MacBook lineup lasts an average of 15-16 hours if longevity is your primary concern.

Which Macs support Apple Intelligence?

Back in 2024, Apple released the initial version of Apple Intelligence for Macs, iPads and iPhones. The launch has been...rocky to say the least. We're still waiting on that fully-smartened up version of Siri (which will use Google Gemini), and a lot of the promises made back then haven't been fulfilled yet.

That being said, when all the features are fully available, every MacBook on this list will meet these requirements, touting a Neural Engine on the chipset and over 16GB of RAM.

However, older MacBooks with Intel chips (i.e., those sold in 2019 and earlier) will not support Apple Intelligence.

How do we test every MacBook?

Outside of putting them through their real-life paces in our day-to-day, we have an advanced suite of lab tests to truly see what performance and power efficiency are like in every single MacBook. Go behind the scenes and check out all the lab tests we do!

To get straight to the point of the key reasons people buy a MacBook — speed and battery life — here are all the results from our Geekbench 6 performance testing, disk speed tests, and the speed of transcoding video.

Geekbench 6 CPU benchmark results

Beyond these, we test the display with a high-end colorimeter and brightness tester — to ensure you're getting a great panel for the price. Then, we move onto professional performance and graphics-intensive tasks like Pugetbench benchmarks with Adobe apps.

And finally, as Apple is now really going hard on MacBook gaming, we have plenty of games benchmarks, including most recently Cyberpunk 2077!

Battery life chart

And our final big test is of the battery life. We run our custom battery test to see how long each MacBook (at 150 nits of brightness) can last browsing the web over Wi-Fi until it runs out of juice. Here's how all of the best MacBooks stack up. Spoiler alert: they're some of the longest-running laptops you can snag right now.

TOPICS
Jason England
Managing Editor — Computing

Jason brings a decade of tech and gaming journalism experience to his role as a Managing Editor of Computing at Tom's Guide. He has previously written for Laptop Mag, Tom's Hardware, Kotaku, Stuff and BBC Science Focus. In his spare time, you'll find Jason looking for good dogs to pet or thinking about eating pizza if he isn't already.