MacBook Air M5 review: Same but faster

MacBook Air M5 review: Same but faster

MacBook Air M5 review: Same but faster

https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/macbook-air-m5-review-same-but-faster-120000685.html

Publish Date: 2026-03-13 08:00:00

Source Domain: www.engadget.com

It’s hard to believe that it’s been almost four years since Apple gave the MacBook Air a serious glow-up. The 2022 model was a total redesign that bumped its performance with the M2 chip and also improved a number of key components. It was also the first MacBook Air to drop the signature tapered design, and Apple added a 15-inch model one year later to boot. Since then, Apple’s primarily focused on making sure it has a new chip every year — we’re already up to the M5, if you can believe it.

As such, the latest MacBook Air is an expected update that doesn’t change the game. Not that it needed changing: it’s been our favorite ultraportable laptop for years now. But the Air’s place in Apple’s lineup has changed with the simultaneous introduction of the $599 MacBook Neo. And unfortunately, Apple didn’t keep the $999 price that last year’s M4 MacBook Air hit; it’s back up to $1,099, the same price as the M2 and M3 models. Now that there’s the new, inexpensive MacBook Neo out there, who is the MacBook Air for? While I haven’t used the Neo yet, I’m pretty comfortable answering that question: it’s still for almost anyone.

Apple / Engadget

This year’s MacBook Air is faster but otherwise unchanged, but that doesn’t stop it from being one of the best laptops you can buy.

Pros

  • Fast performance
  • Solid, thin and light design
  • Excellent trackpad and keyboard

Cons

  • Screen is only 60Hz
  • Could use another port

The essentials haven’t changed

While the latest MacBook Air is physically unchanged from its 2022 revision, I don’t have a problem with that. I find the Air to be the Platonic ideal of a laptop that most people will be hard-pressed to find issues with. The 13.6-inch (or 15.3-inch, if you opt for the bigger size) display isn’t the most cutting edge screen out there, but it’s still sharp, bright and colorful. It’s stuck at a 60Hz refresh rate at a time when many PC manufacturers are using faster screens, but for the Air’s audience I don’t…

Source