Apple’s $599 MacBook Neo Is the Mac Everyone’s Been Waiting For
For years, price was the one thing standing between millions of people and their first Mac. Apple just removed it.
The MacBook Neo launched on March 11, 2026, starting at $599 the lowest price Apple has ever put on a laptop. For students, it drops further to $499 through the education store. After a decade of the MacBook Air holding the entry-level spot at $999+, this is a genuine shift.
What You’re Getting
The Neo runs on Apple’s A18 Pro chip the same processor inside the iPhone 16 Pro, making it the first Mac ever powered by an iPhone chip. That’s the key to the price, and it works better than you’d expect.
For $599 you get a 13-inch Liquid Retina display, 1080p camera, Spatial Audio speakers, up to 16 hours of battery life, and full macOS with Apple Intelligence. It comes in four colors; Silver, Blush, Citrus, and Indigo and the aluminum build is identical to what you’d expect from a much pricier MacBook.
The Compromises
They exist. The base model is fixed at 8GB RAM and 256GB storage with no upgrade option. There’s no Touch ID unless you step up to the $699 model. Only one of the two USB-C ports runs at full USB 3 speeds. No MagSafe, no Thunderbolt.
But Apple drew the line carefully. Nothing essential is broken, just trimmed.
One unexpected win: iFixit confirmed the Neo is Apple’s most repairable laptop in 14 years, with a screwed-down battery and no parts pairing. Foimr budget buyers, that matters.
Why This Is a Big Deal
The MacBook Neo is aimed directly at the markets Apple has never truly competed in students, first-time buyers, and households that defaulted to Chromebooks simply because Macs cost too much.
At $599, it costs the same as the iPhone 17e. A parent can now buy their kid both for a combined budget that wasn’t realistic before.
Analysts are already flagging it as a significant market move. With Gartner projecting PC prices to rise 17% in 2026 due to tariffs, Apple’s timing couldn’t be sharper.
The people who always wanted a Mac but couldn’t justify the price? They just ran out of reasons to wait.
