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Apple now sells refurbished M5 MacBook Pro, iPad 11, and M4 iPad Pro

Apple’s refurbished store now spans M5 MacBook Pro, iPad 11, and M4 iPad Pro, all backed by a full one‑year warranty and AppleCare+ eligibility.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Apr 5, 2026, 11:05 AM EDT
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The 2025 14-inch MacBook Pro is shown propped open and angled to the side.
Image: Apple
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Apple has quietly flipped a key switch in its online store: the latest M5 MacBook Pro, the new-look iPad 11, and even the M4 iPad Pro have all landed in the official refurbished section, turning last year’s hottest hardware into something far more tempting for deal hunters and upgraders alike. For anyone who has been holding off on a new Mac or iPad because of pricing, this is the moment where “maybe later” can realistically become “add to cart.”

Let’s start with the headliner, the 14‑inch MacBook Pro with Apple’s M5 chip, which only debuted in October 2025 and is already getting the refurbished treatment. In the U.S., the base refurbished configuration with a 10‑core CPU, 10‑core GPU, 16GB unified memory, and a 512GB SSD starts at $1,359, roughly a 15 percent cut compared to the same machine bought new. That discount might not sound mind‑blowing on paper, but this is Apple’s own store, not a third‑party marketplace, and the key difference is what you get baked in: the same one‑year warranty as a brand‑new Mac, eligibility for AppleCare+, and the comfort of knowing the machine has gone through Apple’s full testing, repair, repackaging, and cleaning process. Higher‑end configurations are there too, including a 32GB RAM, 4TB SSD variant at $2,759, which is the kind of spec that easily covers developers, video editors, and anyone who just wants a machine that will comfortably last the next five to seven years.

What makes the M5 MacBook Pro particularly interesting in refurbished form is that it’s not a compromise‑era chip you’re buying on the cheap; this is Apple’s current‑gen silicon, with the efficiency gains and performance uplift that make even the “non‑Pro” M‑series chips more than enough for most creative work. Community sentiment reflects that: early buyers describe the base M5 MacBook Pro as “a fantastic piece of kit,” with some users explicitly choosing it over the higher‑wattage Pro chips for better battery life without feeling like they’re missing out in day‑to‑day performance. If your workload is a mix of heavy browser use, creative apps like Lightroom and Final Cut, and a lot of unplugged time, the refurbished M5 tier ends up being that sweet spot between price, performance, and longevity, especially now that the initial launch premium has been shaved off.

On the iPad side, the newly refreshed 11‑inch iPad with the A16 chip is also joining the refurbished lineup, which is great news for anyone who wants an everyday tablet without going all‑in on “Pro” pricing. The refurbished base model starts at $299 in the U.S., about $50 below its regular $349 price, though it’s worth pointing out that retailers often discount the new unit to similar territory, so you really have to pay attention to street pricing. Technically, the A16‑powered iPad 11 is a very capable machine: it has an 11‑inch Liquid Retina display, Apple’s A16 chip (the same family used in recent iPhones), support for Apple Pencil (USB-C), a landscape 12MP Center Stage camera, and around 10 hours of battery life, which is plenty for media, note‑taking, casual gaming, and light creative work. If you’re choosing between a discounted new unit from a retailer and a similarly priced refurb from Apple, the deciding factor is often the warranty and peace of mind rather than raw specs; Apple’s refurb route gives you the one‑year coverage and its own refurbishment pipeline, which some buyers will happily prioritize over a slightly lower sale price elsewhere.

2025 iPad 11th-generation in all four available colors, blue, pink, yellow, silver, front all-screen design and black display bezel.
Image: Apple

The surprise extra in this round is the M4 iPad Pro, which has finally appeared as a refurbished option in both 11‑inch and 13‑inch sizes. This is the tablet Apple pitched as a laptop‑adjacent machine when it launched in 2024, and the spec sheet still reads like overkill in the best way: Ultra Retina XDR Tandem OLED display, up to a 10‑core CPU and 10‑core GPU in the M4 chip, ProMotion 120Hz, P3 wide color, True Tone, support for Apple Pencil Pro, and all‑day battery life. On Apple’s refurb store, a 13‑inch M4 iPad Pro with Wi-Fi and 256GB of storage is positioned as a “quality product at a great price,” and while exact discounts vary by configuration, you’re again looking at up to roughly 15 percent savings versus the original MSRP, plus the same refurb warranty and accessories in the box. For power users—designers, illustrators, or anyone leaning into iPadOS as a portable studio—this is likely the most interesting addition, because it finally brings the price of the M4 iPad Pro ecosystem (tablet plus accessories like Apple Pencil Pro and Magic Keyboard) down to something less wallet‑shocking.

2024 OLED M4 iPad Pro
Image: Apple

Stepping back, the broader story here is that Apple’s official refurbished program has evolved into a very practical way to buy “current enough” hardware without feeling like you’re settling. Every Apple Certified Refurbished product gets full functional testing, replacement of any defective modules, thorough cleaning, a new outer shell or battery where needed, repackaging with the appropriate cables and chargers, and a one‑year warranty that mirrors the new‑device experience—including the option to add AppleCare+ for extended coverage. For laptops and tablets that now comfortably last five or more years, shaving 10–15 percent off the top while keeping the same support story is meaningful, especially in markets where resale and refurb channels are already vibrant and third‑party sellers often undercut official pricing but cannot match Apple’s own warranty integration.

If you’re trying to decide whether these refurbished deals are worth it, the questions to ask are simple: how quickly do you need the latest‑possible chip, how sensitive are you to cosmetic perfection, and how much do you value Apple’s own warranty versus a retailer’s or marketplace seller’s coverage. The M5 MacBook Pro refurb is the easiest recommendation because you’re getting top‑tier, current‑gen Mac performance with a meaningful discount and no real functional trade‑off. The iPad 11 refurb is more nuanced—great if you value Apple’s refurb process and want a reliable family or student tablet, but you should compare it against new‑device promos from big retailers, which routinely drop the price to the same or even lower levels. And the M4 iPad Pro refurb is squarely aimed at enthusiasts and pros who have been eyeing that Tandem OLED display and M4 performance but needed the price to come down just enough to justify the accessory spend that inevitably comes with going “all‑in” on an iPad‑first setup.

In short, this batch of refurbished Macs and iPads is less about clearing old shelves and more about giving people a slightly more approachable way into Apple’s current lineup. If you were already planning to buy one of these devices, the refurbished store has just become one of the first tabs you should check—quietly, it’s where some of the most sensible Apple upgrades are now hiding.


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Topic:Apple A16 Bionic ChipApple M4 chipApple M5 chipApple siliconiPad ProLaptopMacBookMacBook ProTablet
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