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AppleComputingMacTech

Apple’s MacBook Neo proves 8GB RAM is a price problem, not a tech problem

Rising RAM prices, a mobile chip with locked memory, and a $599 price tag — here's the full story behind the MacBook Neo's 8GB.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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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 4, 2026, 1:34 PM EST
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Apple MacBook Neo in citrus color.
Image: Apple
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There’s something almost poetic — and a little painful — about what Apple just pulled off with the MacBook Neo. On one hand, you have a genuine Mac laptop for $599, the cheapest Apple notebook ever made, available in four fun colors, running a chip that was inside the iPhone 16 Pro. On the other hand, Apple — the same company that just two years ago quietly declared 8GB of RAM to be beneath the Mac — has gone right back to slapping 8GB into a brand-new machine and calling it a day.

Let’s rewind a bit, because the context here really matters. Back in October 2024, Apple did something that surprised pretty much everyone in the tech world. The company had spent years defending 8GB of unified memory in its base Mac configurations, with executives going so far as to suggest that 8GB of Apple Silicon memory was “probably analogous to 16GB on other computers” due to the efficiency of the unified architecture. That argument, as you might expect, did not go over particularly well. But then, almost without warning, Apple flipped the script entirely. In a single week of Mac announcements, it bumped every Mac in the lineup to at least 16GB RAM as a baseline — and, remarkably, without raising prices. Even older M2 and M3 MacBook Air models got quietly upgraded to 16GB. It was a rare and genuinely consumer-friendly move from a company not always known for them, and it felt like Apple was finally acknowledging what most people already knew: that 8GB, even with Apple’s efficiency tricks, was getting uncomfortably tight for modern workflows.

That 2024 moment set a new precedent. No Mac shipped with less than 16GB from that point on. The bar had been raised. And then, in March 2026, Apple unveiled the MacBook Neo — and the bar quietly came back down.

The MacBook Neo ships with 8GB of unified memory. Not 16GB. Not 12GB. Eight. And unlike virtually every other Mac Apple sells, there is no option to configure more. You get 8GB, full stop. It runs on the A18 Pro chip — the same silicon that powers the iPhone 16 Pro — with a 6-core CPU, 5-core GPU, and a 16-core Neural Engine. The display is a 13-inch Liquid Retina panel at 2408-by-1506 resolution with 500 nits of brightness, and battery life is rated at up to 16 hours. By almost every other measure, this is a real, functional MacBook. But the RAM situation is going to follow this machine around for its entire life.

To be fair to Apple, there’s a somewhat legitimate reason why this happened. The A18 Pro chip is a mobile chip — the exact same one that lives inside the iPhone 16 Pro — and it only comes in one unified memory configuration: 8GB. Apple didn’t have a menu of options here. If you want the A18 Pro, you get 8GB, and that’s what makes the $599 price point possible. The alternative would have been using a newer chip like the A19 Pro, which reportedly could have supported 12GB, but that would have pushed costs higher and potentially bumped the MacBook Neo above its critical $599 entry price. Apple made a deliberate trade-off, and at least internally, that trade-off has a logical rationale behind it.​

But there’s another layer to this story that doesn’t get enough attention, and it has nothing to do with Apple’s chip choices. RAM is genuinely expensive right now — and getting more expensive by the month. Since October 2025, the price of RAM has more than doubled, driven almost entirely by the insatiable appetite of AI data centers gobbling up memory supply that would otherwise end up in consumer devices. DRAM module prices have surged, DDR5 prices are expected to climb by another 50% or more through at least the first half of 2026, and industry experts are suggesting that meaningful market stabilization may not come before 2028. This is real, and it’s not a small thing. When memory prices spike like this, every gigabyte of RAM in a product has a measurably higher cost. For Apple to keep the MacBook Neo at $599, fewer gigabytes of the stuff had to go in. The global AI boom, in a very direct and somewhat ironic way, is partially responsible for the cheapest Mac shipping with the least RAM.​

Still, none of that fully takes the sting out of it for buyers. The MacBook Neo is being positioned as a laptop for students, first-time Mac buyers, and everyday users who want an affordable entry into the Apple ecosystem. That’s a perfectly reasonable product to exist. And for a lot of those use cases — web browsing, email, word processing, light photo editing, streaming — 8GB on Apple Silicon is genuinely workable. Apple Intelligence features run fine on it. It’s not a machine that’s going to embarrass you for everyday tasks. But these are also exactly the kinds of buyers who tend to keep their laptops for five or six years, maybe longer. And the trajectory of software is not getting lighter. Every macOS release adds features, every browser tab wants more memory, and every app grows more ambitious. The MacBook Neo is being sold today in a world where 8GB is fine. The question is what that 8GB looks like in 2029 or 2030, when the machine is still in daily use.

The comparison that’s worth making isn’t just to other Macs — it’s to the MacBook Air, which now starts at $1,099 with the M5 chip, 16GB of RAM, and 512GB of storage. That’s nearly double the price of the Neo. For a student on a budget, or someone who genuinely can’t stretch to four digits for a laptop, the Neo fills a real gap. But between $599 and $1,099, there is now nothing. No middle option, no $799 MacBook with a bit more RAM and a sensible storage tier. You either go with 8GB and no upgrade path at $599, or you jump almost half a grand to get to 16GB. That’s a gap that feels slightly uncomfortable, and it’ll likely produce a steady stream of buyer’s remorse stories from people who went Neo and then hit the ceiling earlier than expected.​

Apple has always been willing to make controversial memory decisions. For years, it shipped 8GB in base MacBook Pros while marketing them to creative professionals, which was a hard sell. Then it raised the floor to 16GB across the board in a move that earned genuine goodwill. Now it’s back at 8GB, with a new product and a new justification. The MacBook Neo is a compelling machine for what it is — a $599 Mac is a legitimately big deal — but if you’re considering one, go in with clear eyes about the RAM situation. It’s not a dealbreaker for the right buyer. But it is the single most important spec to think about, and it’s the one thing on this machine you absolutely cannot change.


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