Whoops! Apple M5 benchmark leaked, and it's the fastest single-core I’ve ever seen

Apple M5 chip render
(Image credit: Future / Apple)

Apple just revealed its new M5 chip earlier this week alongside M5 versions of a new MacBook Pro, iPad Pro and a refreshed Apple Vision Pro. And now the first alleged benchmark result for the chip has leaked for the 14-inch MacBook Pro.

Based on the single result uploaded to Geekbench 6 today (October 17), the M5 chip is impressive and significantly faster than the M4 CPU. In single-core performance, the CPU reached a score of 4,263.

How the M5 compares to previous M-series chips

apple m5 chip

(Image credit: Apple)

We've had the opportunity to test previous generations of M-series chips and can compare their average performance to those CPUs. In general, the M5 is faster than the older chips and about equal to the M1 Ultra, which is typically found in Mac Studios.

Here's a comparison based on our testing of older testing. Some chips, like the M1 Ultra, were tested on an older version of Geekbench, which I've noted.

Swipe to scroll horizontally
M5 Comparison

M-series CPU

Single Core

Multi Core

M5

4,263

17,862

M4

3,807

15,114

M4 Pro

3,910

22,822

M4 Max

4,060

26,675

M3

3,093

12,025

M3 Pro

3,154

14,357

M3 Max

3,200

21,711

M1 Ultra (Geekbench 5.4)

1,792

23,931

As you can see, the M5 is blazingly faster than the other base-model M4 and M3 chips.

You can find a full breakdown in our ultimate M4 vs M3 vs M2 vs M1 rankings. Once we've had a chance to put the M5 through our lab tests, we'll be sure to add it.

Apple isn't expected to launch the Pro and Max versions of the M5 until early 2026. Presumably, those chips will be even faster, as you can see how the M4 Max and Pro compare to the base chip.

What do these scores mean?

The new 14-inch MacBook Pro features an M5 chip that has a 10-core CPU, with four performance cores and six efficiency cores. The single-core score refers to the performance achieved by one of the performance cores. The multi-core score is achieved through the maximum performance of all 10 CPU cores combined.

The single-core performance is important because you'll see its impacts on some games and apps, and it plays an important role in how responsive the overall system is.

The multi-core score reflects the maximum performance for multithreaded tasks, or how your computer handles multitasking in the operating system.

14-inch MacBook Pro M5 availability

MacBook Pro 2023

(Image credit: Tom's Guide)

The 14-inch MacBook Pro M5 is available for pre-order now and launches on Wednesday next week (Oct. 22).

While the higher-end M5 chips in the 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro models aren't coming until next year, it seems the vanilla M5 is quite the performer.

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Scott Younker
West Coast Reporter

Scott Younker is the West Coast Reporter at Tom’s Guide. He covers all the lastest tech news. He’s been involved in tech since 2011 at various outlets and is on an ongoing hunt to build the easiest to use home media system. When not writing about the latest devices, you are more than welcome to discuss board games or disc golf with him. He also handles all the Connections coverage on Tom's Guide and has been playing the addictive NYT game since it released.

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