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New iPad Air M4 keeps price, adds more memory and Wi-Fi 7

The new iPad Air M4 keeps its slim design but doubles down on power, AI capabilities and Wi-Fi 7, making it a compelling laptop‑adjacent device.

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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Mar 2, 2026, 12:03 PM EST
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Apple iPad Air M4 tablet
Image: Apple
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Apple’s new iPad Air is basically Apple admitting that the “mid-range” iPad doesn’t have to feel mid-range anymore. The 2026 refresh takes a big leap with the M4 chip, more memory across the board, and Wi-Fi 7 support, while keeping the same starting price as last year’s model.​

At the heart of this update is the M4 chip, which instantly changes what “Air” means in Apple’s lineup. Apple claims the new iPad Air is up to 30 percent faster than the previous M3‑based model, and up to 2.3x faster than the M1 Air that many students and creators are still using. In practical terms, this isn’t just about apps opening a bit quicker. The 9‑core GPU brings support for second‑generation hardware‑accelerated ray tracing and mesh shading, which matters if you’re gaming, previewing 3D scenes, or working with more complex visual projects on the go.

Where things get interesting for power users is memory. Unified memory now starts at 12GB with 120GB/s bandwidth on the M4 iPad Air, which is a 50 percent jump over the previous generation and a spec you’d have only expected on “Pro” hardware a couple of years ago. That extra headroom is exactly what you want if you live in apps like Final Cut Pro, Pixelmator Pro, or Notion and keep far too many Safari tabs open while running multiple windows side by side.​

Apple is also positioning this iPad Air as much more “AI‑ready.” The 16‑core Neural Engine is up to 3x faster than the one in the M1 Air, and Apple leans on this for on‑device tasks like searching text and subjects in photos, using handwriting and note‑enhancement features in apps like Goodnotes, and powering new Apple Intelligence features in iPadOS 26. For everyday users, that means things like smarter, more private suggestions and content generation on‑device rather than everything being kicked to the cloud.​

Apple iPad Air M4 tablet
Image: Apple

Connectivity is another quiet but important shift. The new Air is the first in the lineup to get Apple’s N1 wireless chip, which brings Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 6, Thread support, and better stability for things like AirDrop and Personal Hotspot. If you grab the cellular model, you also get the new C1X modem that can deliver up to 50 percent faster cellular data with around 30 percent lower modem power use for heavy data users compared to the M3 model, plus GPS and full 5G support. For anyone who works between home, campus, and coffee shops, this is the kind of invisible upgrade that just makes the device feel more reliable day to day.​

Apple is still offering the iPad Air in two sizes: an 11‑inch model that remains the default choice for most people and a 13‑inch version for those who want laptop‑like screen real estate. Both come in four finishes — blue, purple, starlight, and space gray — and are available in 128GB, 256GB, 512GB, and 1TB storage configurations, which finally gives entry‑level users more breathing room than the old 64GB starting point.

  • Apple iPad Air M4 tablet
  • Apple iPad Air M4 tablet

On the software side, iPadOS 26 is trying to make the iPad feel less like a giant phone and more like a flexible computer. Apple is introducing a new Liquid Glass design language that subtly refracts and responds to your interactions while pushing content forward visually. More importantly, there’s a new windowing system that makes it easier to resize, arrange, and switch between apps, along with a menu bar you can reveal with a swipe from the top or by moving the cursor up when using a keyboard and trackpad.​

The built‑in Files app is getting more serious, too. There’s a more powerful List view, better folder customization, and the ability to keep folders right in the Dock so you can reach your downloads, project folders, or documents from anywhere. You can even set default apps for specific file types, which nudges the iPad experience closer to what macOS and Windows users expect and makes the Air feel more viable as a primary work machine.

Apple is also folding in a dedicated Preview app on iPad, something Mac users have relied on for years. You can view, annotate, and mark up PDFs and images here, or quickly sketch with Apple Pencil, without jumping into a heavier third‑party tool. And for creators, iPadOS 26 taps into Apple silicon for more advanced audio input control, high‑quality local capture, and better background task handling, so exports and renders don’t block everything else you want to do.​

Accessories are still a big part of the iPad Air story. Apple Pencil (USB‑C) remains the affordable option for note‑taking and basic sketching, while Apple Pencil Pro unlocks more advanced tricks such as squeeze gestures and “barrel roll” for more natural control, plus Find My support for that inevitable moment it disappears into a backpack. On the keyboard side, the Magic Keyboard keeps its floating design, built‑in trackpad, and 14‑key function row, now with a machined aluminum hinge that includes a USB-C port so you can charge while keeping the main USB-C port free.​

If you’re upgrading, Apple is clearly targeting users coming from older iPads and the M1 iPad Air in particular. Apple says those users can expect up to 2.3x faster performance and more than 4x faster 3D pro rendering with ray tracing, which is a big jump if you do any 3D work or modern gaming. You also get the newer landscape‑oriented 12MP Center Stage front camera, better stereo speakers (especially on the 13‑inch model), and full access to Apple Intelligence features as they roll out.

Pricing stays familiar, which is key. In the U.S., the 11‑inch iPad Air starts at $599 for Wi-Fi and $749 for Wi-Fi + Cellular, while the 13‑inch starts at $799 and $949, respectively. Education pricing brings that down to $549 for the 11‑inch and $749 for the 13‑inch, making it more accessible for students and institutions, especially when paired with trade‑in offers. Magic Keyboard costs $269 for the 11‑inch and $319 for the 13‑inch (with education discounts trimming those slightly), while Apple Pencil Pro is $129 and Apple Pencil (USB‑C) is $79.​

Pre‑orders open March 4 in 35 countries and regions, including the U.S., with availability set for March 11 through Apple Stores, authorized resellers, and online. For anyone who has been sitting on an older iPad or considering whether they really need an iPad Pro, this new Air with M4, more memory, Wi‑Fi 7, and iPadOS 26’s more desktop‑like experience is probably the most balanced iPad Apple sells right now.


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