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AppleApple DealsBack to SchoolBuying GuideComputing

Apple’s college student offer returns—along with some notable exclusions

Apple’s college promo is live, but you only have six weeks to decide.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
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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Jul 17, 2026, 4:17 AM EDT
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Promotional graphic featuring an Apple MacBook and iPad with colorful wallpapers alongside an Apple Gift Card on a black background. Bright comic-style graphic elements surround the devices, highlighting an Apple gift card offer for eligible Mac and iPad purchases.
Image: Apple
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Every mid-July, like clockwork, college students, parents, and educators gear up for one of the tech world’s most anticipated annual savings events: Apple’s Back to School promotion. This year, the deal is officially live on the Apple Education Store, promising standard educational discounts paired with promotional Apple Gift Cards worth up to $150. On paper, it is a stellar deal—especially if you already have your eyes on a new Mac or iPad for the upcoming semester.

Shop the Apple Education Store

But if you peel back the layers of this year’s offer, the landscape looks a bit different than in previous years. Apple has quietly tightened the screws. From an unusually short shopping window to notable product exclusions and a slight downgrade in gift card value for the line’s most popular laptop, this year’s promo requires a bit of strategy to ensure you are actually getting a good deal.

The six-week dash

The single most surprising change to the promotion is the calendar. In past years, Apple’s back-to-school event was a leisurely, summer-long affair. Historically, the sale kicked off in June and coasted comfortably past Labor Day into late September or even early October, giving students plenty of time to figure out their class requirements and syllabi before committing to a major purchase.

This year, Apple is putting buyers on a tight clock. The promotion launched on July 16 and is scheduled to end on August 27, 2026. That is a mere six-week window. According to a Macworld analysis, this represents the shortest duration in the promotion’s recent history. If you are waiting on a financial aid package or trying to budget your summer paychecks, you have far less breathing room.

The math: gift cards, discounts, and the hidden price crunch

So, what do you actually get if you buy right now? As with previous iterations, the deal is a two-part harmony: you get a direct discount on the hardware itself (usually around 5% to 10% off retail pricing) plus a promotional Apple Gift Card. Here is how the math shakes out for the eligible devices:

  • MacBook Pro: Buying a powerhouse MacBook Pro (now featuring M5, M5 Pro, and M5 Max chips) starting from $1,899 through the education storefront nets you a $150 gift card.
  • MacBook Air: Opting for the student-favorite MacBook Air (now featuring the M5 chip) from $1,199 gets you a $100 gift card.
  • iPad Pro: Grabbing the ultra-premium M5-powered iPad Pro starting at $1,099 gets you a $100 gift card.
  • iPad Air: Selecting the versatile M4 iPad Air starting at $699 also lands you a $100 gift card.

While a $100 or $150 gift card is certainly nice to have—and perfect for offsetting the cost of accessories like an Apple Pencil or a protective case—veteran deal-hunters will notice a slight regression. As pointed out by MacRumors, Apple gave a $150 gift card to MacBook Air buyers in 2024. Dropping the Air’s incentive down to $100 means you’re leaving fifty bucks on the table compared to previous cycles.

Additionally, we have to talk about the backdrop of recent price hikes. Earlier this year, a squeeze on memory component costs pushed Apple to raise base configuration prices across much of its lineup. Because of this, that $100 gift card on an iPad Air or MacBook Air doesn’t stretch quite as far toward neutralizing the retail price as it would have a year ago. It is still a discount, but it is more of a cushion against recent inflation than a deep-cut bargain.

The big exclusions: who is left out in the cold?

Perhaps more telling than what is included is what has been left off the guest list. If you prefer a desktop computer for your dorm room or need a highly budget-conscious option, you might be disappointed:

  • No desktop Macs: In previous years, the Mac mini and iMac were staples of the Back to School promo, often yielding a $100 or $150 gift card. This year, Apple has excluded desktop Macs entirely. You can still get standard educational pricing on them, but you won’t get a gift card.
  • The MacBook Neo conundrum: Apple’s intriguing new budget entry, the MacBook Neo—which starts at a tempting educational price of $599—is also completely ineligible for the promotion. While it is a fantastic price point for light academic use, Apple is clearly reserving the promotional gift cards for its more premium, higher-margin portables.
  • No entry-level iPad or iPad mini: If you’re looking at the standard entry-level iPad or the portable iPad mini, you’ll also be shopping outside the gift card promo boundaries.

Is it better to buy elsewhere?

This brings us to the ultimate buyer’s dilemma: should you actually buy directly from Apple?

The answer depends heavily on how you plan to configure your machine. If you are looking for a baseline, off-the-shelf model (for example, a base-model MacBook Air with standard memory and storage), you can almost always find a better straight-cash discount at big-box retailers. Throughout the year, third-party sellers regularly slash $150 to $200 off the retail price of standard MacBooks. If you buy from them, that discount is subtracted directly from your checkout total, which is arguably much more useful than a gift card you are forced to spend back at the Apple Store.

However, if you need a machine custom-built to survive a demanding major—like upgrading a MacBook Pro to 24GB or 36GB of unified memory for computer science, engineering, or film production—buying directly from Apple is a different story. Third-party retailers rarely stock custom configurations, and when they do, they are rarely discounted.

By purchasing a customized Mac through Apple’s Education Store, you get the standard education discount on both the base machine and the component upgrades, the $100 or $150 gift card to use on accessories or software subscriptions, and a 10% discount on AppleCare+ to protect your investment over a multi-year degree program.

Ultimately, Apple’s College Student Offer remains a highly reliable way to buy a new Mac or iPad, but it is no longer the absolute no-brainer it used to be. The tighter six-week window means you have to make up your mind quickly before the August 27 deadline.

If you are a student who needs a specialized, customized MacBook Pro to get you through the next four years, the education store remains your best and safest bet. But if you’re just looking for a simple, baseline MacBook Air to write papers and stream lectures, keep one eye on third-party retailers over the next few weeks. You might just find a cash-in-hand discount that beats Apple’s gift card altogether.


Disclaimer: Prices and promotions mentioned in this article are accurate at the time of writing and are subject to change based on the retailers’ discretion. Please verify the current offer before making a purchase.


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Topic:Apple A17 Bionic ChipApple A17 Pro chipApple M4 chipApple M5 chipApple siliconiMaciPadiPad AiriPad miniiPad ProLaptopMacBookMacBook AirMacBook NeoMacBook ProTablet
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