The 2026 MacBook lineup is the clearest Apple has ever drawn its lines. Three machines, three very different people.
The MacBook Neo starts under €620, the first Mac that costs less than many flagship Android phones. For the right person, it is a capable machine. The MacBook Air is where most buyers in this MacBook comparison 2026 end up, and for good reason. The MacBook Pro is the machine whose price justification comes from the work it produces.
The real conversation is Air vs Pro, and a firm answer follows. On refurbed, the 2024 and 2025 generations of Air and Pro are available right now at significantly lower prices, each backed by a 12-month warranty.
Choose the MacBook Neo if your day is email, web, YouTube, video calls, and the occasional Word doc, and under €620 is the right price for you. It handles all of that without complaint.
Choose the MacBook Air if you have ever felt a laptop slow down under pressure, work in creative apps even occasionally, or want a machine that will still feel fast in four years. MacBook Air models are available on refurbed from €594 (M2, 2022), €809 (M3, 2024), and €996 (M4, 2025).
Choose the MacBook Pro if the result of your work ends with money entering your bank account: sustained video editing, 3D rendering, large audio production, or professional software that cannot wait for its hardware. MacBook Pro models are available on refurbed from €1,015 (M3 Pro, 2023), €1,399 (M4 Pro, 2024), and €1,516 (M5, 2025).
Consider a refurbished MacBook Air instead of a new Neo if you are comparing prices. A refurbished M3 Air from refurbed starts from €809 and a refurbished M4 Air from €996. Both include a backlit keyboard, Force Touch haptic trackpad, MagSafe charging, Thunderbolt 4, and 16 GB of RAM. The smarter buy at comparable money.
Around 70% of laptop users sit in the Neo-to-Air range. The section below settles most of it.
Starting under €620, the MacBook Neo is the first Mac that costs less than many flagship Android phones. For the right person, it is an excellent machine.
The A18 Pro chip, the same 6-core chip as the iPhone 16 Pro, handles web, email, Slack, video calls, and light 4K editing without drama. Real-world battery lands around 8 to 10 hours of typical use. The users it is built for: students, first-time Mac buyers, light casual users. 'Students, grandmas, and my 27-year-old brother who watches YouTube' is a fair summary. Around 70% of all laptop buyers fit this profile.
The ceiling is stated plainly:
8 GB RAM, no upgrade path. Multiple reviewers call this the most meaningful long-term constraint. In 3 to 5 years, growing app demands may feel tight. Buying a Neo in 2026 means committing to 8 GB for the machine's entire lifespan.
Non-backlit keyboard and mechanical (non-haptic) trackpad. Both are noticeably below the Air and Pro in daily use.
2x USB-C only. No MagSafe, no Thunderbolt, no HDMI, no SD card. The front port runs at USB 2 speed. macOS tells you which port is which, but that does not make the limitation less real.
Explore the MacBook Neo on refurbed. If any of those limitations sounds familiar from your last laptop, the Air in the next section is the smarter long-term buy.
The MacBook Air is what reviewers call 'the affordable Pro MacBook for anyone who doesn't need the MacBook Pro.' The Neo has given budget buyers a real option. For most people in this MacBook comparison 2026, the Air is still where the decision ends.
Who it is for: knowledge workers with 20 Chrome tabs open, semi-pro creators, developers on light-to-medium projects, anyone who has felt their laptop slow down when things get busy.
The upgrade from the Neo is not marginal. The Air has a backlit Magic Keyboard, Force Touch haptic trackpad with adjustable sensitivity, MagSafe charging, 2x Thunderbolt 4 for faster data transfer, and a 1080p Center Stage camera. The Air's camera produces a natural image where the Neo's is over-sharpened and processed. The M5 10-core chip delivers roughly double the multi-core and GPU performance of the Neo's A18 Pro. Display: 13.6-inch, 2560x1664, 60Hz IPS with P3 wide colour for better colour accuracy in creative work.
RAM decision: the Air comes in 16 GB and 32 GB. Go straight to 32 GB for any creative or sustained professional work. 'Skip the middle rung. Go straight to 32.'
Price on refurbed: the MacBook Air M5 2026 starts from €1,100. For even better value, a refurbished MacBook Air M4 2025 starts from €996.
Battery: the Air is consistently the battery leader among fanless laptops, with around 10 to 12 hours of typical use. That is 20 to 25% more than the Neo in practice. Wi-Fi 7 on the 2026 model adds meaningfully faster wireless than the Neo's Wi-Fi 6E.
The Air will throttle under extreme sustained loads. Most Air users never come close to that ceiling.
The MacBook Pro is for a very specific user. If you are still asking whether you need it, you probably do not. 'If you know, you know you need it.'
The 2026 model on refurbed is the M5 Pro: 15-core CPU, 16-core GPU. This is not the base M5 that powers the Air. The M5 Pro is the professional chip tier, and it changes what the machine can do in sustained use.
Who it is for: professional video editors in long-form or broadcast, VFX and 3D artists in Blender or Unreal Engine, audio engineers running hundreds of Logic or Ableton tracks, developers building large native apps who need headroom for Docker and Xcode simultaneously, and local AI users running on-device models where RAM is literally where the AI lives.
The M5 Pro 64 GB unlock: in the M4 generation, reaching 64 GB of RAM required the Max chip. With M5 Pro that barrier is gone, making the 14-inch M5 Pro with 64 GB the best config for photo and video creators.
Thunderbolt 5: the Air has Thunderbolt 4. The Pro has Thunderbolt 5, nearly 3x the bandwidth. For high-bandwidth external drives, docking stations, or pro peripherals, that gap matters.
The fan reality check: the Pro has active cooling. Multiple long-term Pro users report they have never heard the fans in normal use. 'I tried to break it. I couldn't make it sweat at all.' The fans exist as a ceiling for extreme sustained work: VFX renders, long encoding sessions, heavy compilation.
Price on refurbed: from €2,210. The MacBook Pro: the one to buy when your work pays for the machine.
Both available on refurbed now. Same M4 chip generation, different machines for different people. The price gap narrows when you go refurbed. The spec gap does not.
Ports: the dongle problem
The Neo and the Air have no SD card slot and no HDMI. 'You park at your home desk. Soon, it becomes a crime scene of dongles.' An Air with a good Thunderbolt dock is a valid solution, but docks cost €80 to €150, and that narrows the real-world price gap with the Pro considerably. If an SD card reader and HDMI are part of your weekly workflow, the Pro's built-in ports save money and friction over the life of the machine.
Thermal headroom: the fans you never hear
The Air is fanless and will throttle under extreme sustained loads. The Pro has active cooling that eliminates the performance ceiling. The practical reality: multiple long-term Pro users report they have never heard the fans on an M-series MacBook Pro. The fans exist for the most demanding 1% of use cases: VFX renders, long encoding sessions, heavy compilation. If your work does not include those, the Air's fanless design is a non-issue.
Display: ProMotion and the 120 Hz difference
The Air's 13.6-inch display is IPS P3 at 60 Hz. The Pro adds ProMotion 120 Hz, higher peak brightness, and an optional nanotexture matte finish. For colour-critical work or regular outdoor use, this gap is real.
RAM ceiling: where the Pro wins
The Air M4 2025 tops out at 24 GB. The Pro M4 2024 goes up to 64 GB. For professional video editors, large Xcode projects, or local AI users running large models, the RAM ceiling is the deciding factor: not the GPU, not the fans. A specced-up Air approaches Pro territory in price while hitting this ceiling.
The waiting cost trap
There is a hidden cost to waiting for the next MacBook Pro refresh. Professionals who need the Pro buy it. Those going back and forth after two weeks are often telling themselves something. 'There'll always be a next one. Don't let it trip you up.' If you have been deciding between Air and Pro for more than two weeks, buy the Air.
At prices close to the new MacBook Neo, a refurbished M3 or M4 MacBook Air delivers what the Neo does not: backlit keyboard, Force Touch haptic trackpad, MagSafe charging, Thunderbolt 4, and 16 GB of RAM. Karl Conrad called it 'the sleeper one to buy.'
The numbers: a refurbished MacBook Air M3 2024 13.6-inch is available on refurbed from around €789 to €929. A refurbished MacBook Air M4 2025 runs from around €976 to €1,116. Both include a 12-month minimum warranty and a 30-day free trial.
A quick color note: M3 and newer MacBook Airs no longer come in classic Space Gray. If you see a Space Gray Air in a second-hand listing, it is almost certainly an M2 model. That colorway is a buying signal, not a red flag.
Every refurbished MacBook on refurbed is professionally tested, cleaned, and backed by a minimum 12-month warranty with 30-day free returns. A refurbished Air delivers a machine that handles your work for years: not just today, but in 2028 and 2029 when app demands have grown. And it saves approximately 70 kg of CO₂ and around 100,000 litres of water compared to buying new, while keeping electronics out of landfill.
Choosing the 16 GB MacBook Air. Skip the 16 GB Air configuration for any semi-professional or creative workload. Go straight to 32 GB. 16 GB will feel limiting within two years for anyone doing more than light work.
Writing off the Neo because of the 8 GB RAM debate. If your day is web, email, Slack, and YouTube, 8 GB handles that without drama today. The concern is longevity over 3 to 5 years, not day-one performance. The head of IT at a large engineering firm daily-drives a Neo and has never hit the wall. The spec debates on forums are largely disconnected from real daily use.
Waiting for the next MacBook Pro. There will always be a next one. The indecision itself has a cost: in time, productivity, and money spent on whatever you are currently making do with. Professionals who need the Pro buy it.
Treating the 16-inch Pro as a daily portable. It rarely leaves the house. It is a desk machine in a laptop chassis. The 14-inch Pro is the portable powerhouse.
Assuming M5 improves your cloud AI tools. If you use ChatGPT, Claude, or Perplexity via a browser or app, those requests go to servers. The chip on your Mac is irrelevant for cloud AI. The M5's AI gains apply to local on-device models: transcription apps, DrawThings, locally-run LLMs.
Optimal batteries, from day one. MacBook batteries are the most cited concern when buying refurbished. Every MacBook inspected by refurbed is battery-tested and brought to an optimal performance state before it ships. The result: a machine whose battery performs as expected, with no need to budget for a replacement afterwards. Buying through refurbed makes the question of a replacement battery irrelevant. It arrives sorted.
Apple expertise, refined over years. MacBooks require a different depth of knowledge than generic laptops. Apple Silicon, proprietary architecture, sealed chassis, macOS integration: refurbed has built its inspection and restoration processes specifically around Apple hardware. That expertise is what backs every refurbished MacBook on the platform.
The numbers behind buying refurbished. Each unit sold on refurbed carries verified environmental savings compared to buying new:
↓ MacBook Air 13.6" M3 (2024): SAVED 283.8 kg CO₂e | 72,354 L water | 1,337.8 g e-waste
↓ MacBook Air 15.3" M3 (2024): SAVED 352.6 kg CO₂e | 89,845 L water | 1,603.7 g e-waste
↓ MacBook Pro 14" M4 (2024): SAVED 385.9 kg CO₂e | 98,117 L water | 1,712.2 g e-waste
↓ MacBook Air 13.6" M4 (2025): SAVED 284.2 kg CO₂e | 72,573 L water | 1,351.7 g e-waste
↓ MacBook Air 15.3" M4 (2025): SAVED 353.0 kg CO₂e | 90,121 L water | 1,621.3 g e-waste
↓ MacBook Pro 14" M5 (2025): SAVED 366.8 kg CO₂e | 93,289 L water | 1,642.2 g e-waste
12-month minimum warranty + 30-day free trial. The same baseline protection as a new purchase, whatever condition grade you choose.
Not happy? Return it.
Is the MacBook Neo enough for everyday use?
Yes, for most everyday tasks. Web, email, Slack, video calls, and light editing sit comfortably within the Neo's A18 Pro chip. The real concern is longevity: 8 GB RAM may feel limiting in 3 to 5 years as apps grow heavier. For anything beyond light use, the MacBook Air is the better long-term investment.
MacBook Air or MacBook Pro: which should I choose?
The Air is the right answer for the majority of buyers in this comparison. Choose the Pro only if your work is sustained, demanding, and income-linked: video production at broadcast scale, 3D rendering, audio engineering with large project files. If you are still asking, the Air is almost certainly the right call.
Is a refurbished MacBook Air still worth buying in 2026?
Yes. A refurbished MacBook Air M3 2024 starts from around €809 and a refurbished M4 2025 from around €996 on refurbed. Both come with 16 GB base RAM, a backlit keyboard, MagSafe, and Thunderbolt 4, at significantly less than a new Air M5 2026.
Do I need the M5 chip?
For cloud AI tools (ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity via browser or app), the chip on your Mac is irrelevant: those requests go to servers. The M5's on-device AI gains apply to local models: transcription apps, DrawThings, locally-run LLMs. For everything else, focus on chip tier (M vs M Pro vs M Max) and RAM, not the generation number.
Three MacBooks, three clear lanes. On refurbed you can access the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro from the 2024 and 2025 generations today: professionally tested, backed by a minimum 12-month warranty, and priced to make the step up possible.
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