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AppleComputingiPhoneMacTech

Apple is reportedly building a cheaper MacBook — and it might run an iPhone chip

Apple could blend iPhone and Mac technology in a new sub-$1,000 laptop.

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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Nov 4, 2025, 12:55 PM EST
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Left side view of the 2015 12-inch MacBook.
Photo by Rüdiger Müller
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Apple’s Mac lineup has long been a high-margin, high-design wedge in the PC market. Now, according to reporting this week, the company is quietly preparing a very different kind of wedge: a lower-cost Mac laptop built around the kind of A-series silicon that currently powers iPhones — not an M-series chip designed specifically for Macs. If true, the move would be one of the clearest signals yet that Apple is trying to broaden the Mac’s addressable market without abandoning the performance and battery-life story that has defined Apple Silicon.

Bloomberg’s report says Apple plans to launch the new model in the first half of 2026, selling it for “well under $1,000.” To hit that price, Apple would reportedly use a lower-end LCD panel (a cost-saving change from the MacBook Air’s 13.6-inch LED/LCD or mini-LED treatments) and package the device in a slightly smaller screen than the current Air. The laptop is described as an “entirely new design” aimed at casual users, students and some business customers.

Bloomberg’s sources also say Apple’s internal testing found the latest iPhone-class chips can outpace the M1 — the original Mac silicon — on real-world tasks, which helps explain why Apple would consider an A-series part for a mainstream, low-cost laptop. That isn’t to say A-series chips match the top-end M-series parts in sustained multi-core performance or thermally-constrained workloads, but they’ve become fast enough — especially in single-threaded performance and neural/AI tasks — for many everyday uses.

Supply-chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has been saying something similar for months. Kuo suggested the chip might be an A18 Pro (the high-end iPhone 16 Pro part) and that Apple could sell the machine in several colors — a nod toward a more consumer-focused, possibly fun, design language. He also pegged mass-production timing around late 2025 or early 2026.

Why this matters — and why it’s believable

There are three practical angles that make this rumor more plausible than it would have seemed a few years ago:

  1. Costs vs. performance have shifted. Apple’s mobile chips keep eating into the desktop/laptop performance envelope. Modern A-series silicon offers very high single-core speeds and extremely capable neural engines; for students, office workers and many consumers, that may be “good enough” while saving Apple money and keeping battery life strong. Bloomberg’s reporting that A-series silicon can beat the M1 in tests is a shorthand for that shifting balance.
  2. Market pressure. Chromebooks and cheap Windows laptops have dominated the lower end for years. If Apple wants to grow market share in education and emerging markets, an official, genuinely affordable Mac would make strategic sense — both as a device and as a way to keep users in Apple’s ecosystem longer. Apple could price this closer to the iPad + keyboard territory to make the math simpler for buyers used to that category.
  3. Product-line logic. Apple can keep selling pro-grade M5 MacBook Airs and M5 Pro/Max MacBook Pros for professionals and creatives while offering a pared-down Mac for mainstream buyers. Apple’s recent public work on M5 and its rollout schedule make that two-tiered approach feasible — Apple isn’t abandoning high-end silicon while it expands the low end.

The trade-offs — what an A-series MacBook probably won’t do

If Apple ships a laptop with an A-series chip, expect limits that naturally follow from the engineering choices:

  • Sustained heavy workloads (video rendering, large compiles, long video exports) will favor M-series chips because of better sustained multi-core performance and thermal headroom. The new device will likely be tuned for responsiveness and efficiency, not peak throughput.
  • Display and materials may be simpler to keep costs down — Bloomberg explicitly mentions a “lower-end LCD display” and a smaller-than-Air screen. That suggests the target buyer is someone who values price and portability over a high-fidelity panel.
  • Positioning and margins: Apple will have to sacrifice some margin per unit if it prices the laptop “well under $1,000,” but the strategy could be to sell more units and lock users into services and the ecosystem. Analysts earlier projected millions of units if Apple pursues this route.

If you’re a student, a parent looking for a dependable school laptop, or an IT buyer for a small company, this could be the long-promised “affordable Mac”: modern performance for common tasks, Apple’s software polish, and better longevity than many cheap Windows notebooks. For professionals who rely on sustained heavy computing, it’s unlikely to replace an M-series Mac for serious workloads.

Bloomberg dates the product to the first half of 2026, and Ming-Chi Kuo’s production window (late 4Q25 to early 1Q26) tracks with that. Apple itself hasn’t confirmed anything; the company typically prefers to stay quiet until it’s ready to ship. As always with supply-chain leaks and analyst notes, plans can shift — Apple could change the chip, the display, or even cancel the product if tests or margins don’t meet the company’s standards.

Apple’s slow creep into the lower end of the laptop market would be one of the company’s more interesting strategic moves in years: it would mean offering a deliberately less expensive Mac but keeping the software and service advantages that make macOS attractive. Whether that device becomes a gateway product that pulls a new generation into Apple’s ecosystem — or a niche, color-sold curiosity — will depend on pricing, performance and whether Apple can keep the Mac’s character intact while trimming cost. For now, we’ll watch the supply-chain signals and Apple’s own cadence: M5 for the pros is rolling out, and a cheaper, A-series Mac may arrive in the spring of 2026 — if the leaks prove right.


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Topic:Apple A18 chipApple siliconLaptopMacBookMacBook AirMark Gurman
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