For years, the idea of Apple making a genuinely affordable laptop felt like wishful thinking — the kind of thing people said on forums every year before Apple refreshed the MacBook Air and kept the price comfortably above the thousand-dollar mark. That conversation is over now. On Wednesday, March 4, 2026, Apple officially announced the MacBook Neo, its cheapest laptop ever, and for students, it starts at just $499.
That’s not a sale price. That’s not a refurbished unit or a trade-in deal. That is the actual starting price through Apple’s education store for eligible college students and educational staff, and it represents one of the most significant pricing moves Apple has made in years. For the general public, the base model starts at $599 — still the most affordable new MacBook Apple has ever sold.
The timing is deliberate, and the target is clear. Apple is going after the Chromebook and budget Windows PC market in a way it never has before. Gartner analyst Autumn Stanish noted that the MacBook Neo could meaningfully boost Apple’s presence in classrooms, where Chromebooks have long dominated simply because of price. At $499 for students, Apple is no longer asking anyone to compromise on their budget for the privilege of macOS.
So what do you actually get for that price? The MacBook Neo comes with Apple’s A18 Pro chip — yes, the same chip that powered the iPhone 16 Pro — making it the first Mac ever to run on an iPhone processor. Apple says it’s up to 50% faster for everyday tasks than the best-selling PC with the latest shipping Intel Core Ultra 5 chip, and up to 3x faster for on-device AI workloads. That’s not a small gap. That’s a chasm, and it’s sitting inside a machine that costs $499 for students.
The display is a 13-inch Liquid Retina panel with a 2408-by-1506 resolution, 500 nits of brightness, and an anti-reflective coating. There’s no notch — instead, the MacBook Neo uses uniform, iPad-style bezels all around, which gives it a clean, modern look that feels fresh compared to the MacBook Air. It comes in four colors: Silver, Indigo, Blush, and Citrus, with the colored finish extending to the Magic Keyboard in lighter shades. It’s a machine that is clearly designed to appeal to a younger audience who might find the MacBook Air’s more restrained silver-and-starlight palette a little boring.

At 2.7 pounds, the Neo is lighter than the MacBook Air, and it ships with a 1080p front-facing camera, dual mics with directional beamforming, and dual side-firing speakers with Spatial Audio. Battery life is rated at 16 hours, which is competitive with anything in its class. Connectivity includes Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 6, along with two USB-C ports — one USB-C 2 port supporting speeds up to 480Mb/s and a USB-C 3 port supporting up to 10Gb/s — plus a headphone jack.
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There is, however, a very deliberate limitation baked in that Apple isn’t shy about. The MacBook Neo ships with just 8GB of unified memory, and there is no upgrade option. That’s it. You take it or you leave it. For power users, creatives running heavy workloads, or anyone who regularly has twenty browser tabs and a video edit open simultaneously, this will be a deal-breaker — and some early community reactions have reflected exactly that. But for the actual target audience here — students, first-time laptop buyers, people who need web browsing, word processing, streaming, and light photo work — 8GB on Apple silicon is genuinely adequate in a way that 8GB on Intel never was.
Touch ID is also not included in the base model. To get fingerprint login, you’d need to step up to the $699 configuration, which also bumps storage to 512GB. For education customers, that upgraded model comes in at $599. So the full MacBook Neo pricing works out like this: $499 for students (256GB, no Touch ID), $599 for students who want 512GB and Touch ID, $599 standard retail for the base model, and $699 standard retail for the top configuration. That is genuinely the most expensive MacBook Neo gets on its own.
To put the pricing in context against Apple’s broader Mac lineup in the United States: the 13-inch MacBook Air starts at $1,099, the 15-inch MacBook Air at $1,299, the 14-inch MacBook Pro at $1,699, and the 16-inch MacBook Pro at $2,699. The MacBook Neo undercuts the cheapest MacBook Air by $500 at retail, or $600 if you’re a student. That’s not an incremental move — that’s Apple opening an entirely new rung on the ladder.
Apple SVP of Hardware Engineering John Ternus described the MacBook Neo as “totally new” and built “from the ground up” at a launch event held in New York on Wednesday. The framing wasn’t accidental. Apple isn’t positioning this as a stripped-down MacBook Air. It’s a fundamentally different kind of Mac, one that happens to run the same macOS Tahoe software, support the same apps, and integrate with the same Apple ecosystem. That’s what makes the value proposition so striking — you get a real Mac, not a compromised one.
The choice to use the A18 Pro rather than an M-series chip is what makes the $599 price point possible, and it also points to something larger about where Apple’s chip strategy is heading. Jitesh Ubrani, a research manager at the International Data Corporation, put it well: Apple is running a more heavyweight operating system on a chip designed for a lightweight one, and the fact that it works well enough to power a real laptop says everything about how far Apple’s silicon program has come. PC makers who rely on Intel or AMD for chips, and Microsoft or Google for software, simply can’t replicate that level of vertical integration to produce the same value at the same price.
The competitive implications are significant. Tom’s Guide, which got hands-on time with the MacBook Neo in New York, described it as potentially “the most disruptive laptop since the original MacBook Air“. That’s high praise, but it’s not entirely unwarranted. Chromebooks have owned the sub-$500 laptop space for years, particularly in education, largely because there was nothing from Apple anywhere near that price range. That changes on March 11, when the MacBook Neo ships. At $499 for students — with Apple intelligence features baked in, a proper Liquid Retina display, 16-hour battery life, and genuine macOS — a Chromebook starts to look like a significantly less compelling option.
There’s also a broader market backdrop worth understanding here. Gartner expects overall PC prices to increase by 17% in 2026 due to memory shortages driven by surging AI data center demand, and the International Data Corporation estimates global PC sales will decline by 11.3% this year. Apple, by launching a low-cost MacBook before those price hikes become widespread, may be positioning itself to gain market share precisely when the rest of the industry is contracting. Ubrani told CNN that Apple’s expected share gain in a shrinking market is “primarily because of this device“.
There’s also a notable environmental story here that Apple is leaning into. The company says the MacBook Neo is its lowest-carbon Mac to date, made with 60% recycled materials — more than any other Apple product. That includes 90% recycled aluminum in the enclosure and 100% recycled cobalt in the battery. For a device aimed at a younger demographic that increasingly cares about sustainability, that’s not a throwaway marketing line.
The MacBook Neo is available to pre-order as of today and will be available in stores starting Wednesday, March 11. For students who qualify for Apple’s education pricing — which covers college students, teachers, faculty, and educational staff — the $499 starting price is accessible directly through Apple’s education store online. Veterans and military personnel can also access a discounted price of $539.
It’s worth noting that Apple simultaneously launched several other products this week, including the M5 MacBook Air, M5 Pro and M5 Max MacBook Pro, iPhone 17e, M4 iPad Air, and a new Studio Display. It’s been a packed week for the company, but the MacBook Neo is arguably the most consequential announcement of the bunch — not because it’s the most powerful product Apple released, but because it’s the most accessible one. For a student who needs a capable laptop that runs macOS, integrates seamlessly with their iPhone, handles everything from Google Docs to Zoom to photo editing, and doesn’t require a second job to afford, the MacBook Neo at $499 is genuinely hard to argue with.
Apple has spent over a decade building one of the most loyal customer bases in consumer technology. But loyalty has always been easier to maintain than to earn. With the MacBook Neo, the company is making a serious attempt to earn it from an entirely new generation of users — students, young adults, and first-time Mac buyers who have never owned an Apple laptop because they simply couldn’t afford one. For $499, that changes today.
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