MacBook Neo outperforms MacBook Air in one key area – it’s clearly designed to do this one thing well
Publish Date: 2026-03-06 06:00:00
Source Domain: www.t3.com
Quick Summary
Geekbench test results for the MacBook Neo are in and it compares favourably with other Apple devices – especially if you’re looking to upgrade from an older MacBook.
The single-core performance is of particular note, as this is what will drive the Neo’s most used capabilities – such as video streaming, browsing and productivity.
Apple finally unveiled its MacBook Neo on Wednesday, after months of rumours and speculation, and we have to say it lives up to expectations. In look and design, anyway.
Unsurprisingly, it’s nowhere near as powerful as the latest M5 MacBook Pro and Air models, and can’t touch the M4 MacBook Air when it comes to certain tasks, but there are some interesting results in comparison with the M1 MacBook Air and even M3 iPad Air.
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As reported by MacRumors and according to Geekbench, the MacBook Neo’s single-core performance is up there with most devices – even bettering the M1 MacBook Air. That’s important for what the new laptop is effectively designed for – video streaming, browsing and productivity tasks.
Its multi-core performance is also better than the six-year-old MacBook Air, and the “Metal” GPU performance is on a par. Maybe it’s time to consider an upgrade?
- MacBook Neo: 3,461 single-core, 8,668 multi-core, 31,286 Metal
- M1 MacBook Air: 2,346 single-core, 8,342 multi-core, 33,148 Metal
- M4 MacBook Air: 3,696 single-core, 14,730 multi-core, 54,630 Metal
- M3 iPad Air: 3,048 single-core, 11,678 multi-core, 44,395 Metal
- iPad 11: 2,587 single-core, 6,036 multi-core, 19,395 Metal
- iPhone 16 Pro: 3,445 single-core, 8,624 multi-core, 32,575 Metal
Interestingly, even though the Neo uses the same A18 Pro system-on-chip (SoC) as the iPhone 16 Pro and Pro…