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MacBook Neo vs MacBook Air: Every difference between Apple’s 13-inch laptops

The new MacBook Neo is officially here, and it gives MacBook Air a run for its money when it comes to casual usage. So what exactly is the $500 difference between Apple’s two 13-inch laptops? Let’s dig in to every difference.

Every difference between MacBook Neo and MacBook Air

Let’s start with the big stuff: price and main specs.

MacBook Neo is a 13-inch laptop that costs $599 for 256GB storage and 8GB RAM. It runs on a version of Apple’s A18 Pro chip that was first introduced in the iPhone 16 Pro.

$100 more doubles the storage to 512GB and adds a Touch ID fingerprint sensor to the keyboard, but memory is limited to just 8GB RAM.

MacBook Air is a 13.6-inch laptop that costs $1099 for 512GB storage and 16GB RAM. It runs on Apple’s latest M5 chip that is also used in the latest iPad Pro and 14-inch MacBook Pro.

MacBook Air storage upgrades include 1TB, 2TB, and 4TB options. RAM can be configured to 24GB or 32GB. Every MacBook Air comes with Touch ID.

Equally as important: color options.

The new MacBook Neo comes in silver, blush (pink), citrus (yellow), and indigo. MacBook Air continues to come in silver, sky blue (bluish silver), starlight (light gold), and midnight (dark blue). MacBook Neo wins the saturation competition.

A18 Pro vs M5 performance

The A18 Pro chip inside MacBook Neo has a 6-core CPU and a 5-core GPU. The M5 chip inside the MacBook Air has a 10-core CPU and starts with an 8-core GPU.


Apple A18 Pro chip
6-core CPU with 2 performance cores and 4 efficiency cores
5-core GPU
Hardware-accelerated ray tracing
16-core Neural Engine
60GB/s memory bandwidth

M5 chip

10-core CPU with 4 super cores and 6 efficiency cores 
Up to 10-core GPU
Neural Accelerators
Hardware-accelerated ray tracing
16-core Neural Engine 
153GB/s memory bandwidth


Battery life + charging method

Battery life and how you can charge are also different between MacBook Neo and MacBook Air.

MacBook Neo advertises up to 11 hours of wireless web browsing and up to 16 hours of video streaming per charge. It features a 36.5-watt-hour lithium-ion battery.

MacBook Air promises up to 15 hours of wireless web browsing and up to 18 hours of video streaming per charge. It uses a 53.8-watt-hour lithium ion battery.

In practice, MacBook Air will outlast MacBook Neo on a single charge. Real-world results based on mixed usage will vary.

MacBook Neo includes a 20W USB-C Power Adapter and USB-C Charge Cable (1.5 meter) in the box. It charges over USB-C and lacks MagSafe.

MacBook Air comes with a 40W Dynamic Power Adapter with 60W Max and a USB-C to MagSafe 3 Cable (2 meter). MacBook Air, which can charge over USB-C or MagSafe, is fast-charge capable when used with a 70W USB-C Power Adapter or higher.

Display differences

Size isn’t the only display difference between MacBook Neo and MacBook Air.

MacBook Neo has a bit less screen real estate as its 13-inch Liquid Retina display touts 2408 by 1506 pixels at 219 pixels per inch, and its color range isn’t quite as wide with sRGB instead of P3 wide color. Notably, MacBook Neo lacks True Tone technology for automatically adjusting display color warmth.

MacBook Air has a larger 13.6-inch display and more overall resolution with 2560 by 1664 pixels at 224 pixels per inch. The more expensive laptop is also wide color (P3) with True Tone technology supported.

MacBook Neo has a uniform bezel and no notch

For context, the 12-inch MacBook and every Intel MacBook Air were sRGB and not P3 wide color gamut.

Both Mac laptops are rated at 500 nits brightness.

Speaking of displays, MacBook Neo is capable of driving a single external display:

  • Supports one external display with up to a native resolution of 4K at 60Hz4
  • Simultaneously supports the built-in display at full native resolution
  • USB 3 (USB-C) port supports native DisplayPort 1.4 speeds (up to HBR3)

MacBook Air doubles that with the ability to power two external displays simultaneously:

  • Supports up to two external displays:
    • Two displays up to a native resolution of 6K at 60Hz or 4K at 144Hz
    • One display up to a native resolution of 8K at 60Hz or 5K at 120Hz or 4K at 240Hz
  • Supports up to two external displays over a single Thunderbolt port
  • Simultaneously supports the built-in display at full native resolution
  • Thunderbolt 4 (USB‑C) ports support native DisplayPort 1.4 speeds (up to HBR3) with DSC capability

Same weight, different dimensions

Interestingly, both the MacBook Neo and MacBook Air share the same weight despite different overall dimensions.

The two laptops are tied at 2.7 pounds (1.23 kg). The discontinued 12-inch MacBook from 2015 remains undefeated at 2.03 pounds (0.92 kg).

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MacBook Neo is a little thicker with 0.5 inch (1.27 cm) height compared to MacBook Air with 0.44 inch (1.13 cm) height.

Also, MacBook Neo is slightly narrower at 11.71 inches (29.75 cm) wide and a bit shorter at 8.12 inches (20.64 cm) deep. MacBook Air has a larger footprint at 11.97 inches (30.41 cm) wide and 8.46 inches (21.5 cm) deep.

Key tradeoffs for keyboard and trackpad

How important is a backlit keyboard on a laptop?

MacBook Neo is the first Apple laptop in about 16 years to not feature a backlit keyboard.

Apple has sold iPad keyboard cases and desktop keyboards that aren’t backlit, but this is a choice for the MacBook Neo in 2026.

Since there’s no backlit keyboard, there’s also no ambient light sensor in the keyboard, further bringing down the build cost.

On the other hand, MacBook Neo has a color-matched keyboard (and feet) compared to the MacBook Air’s black keyboard (and feet).

MacBook Neo also lacks the Force Touch trackpad, using a mechanical-click trackpad instead.

MacBook Air features a backlit keyboard with Touch ID standard, and a Force Touch trackpad for pressure-sensitive input.

In practice, not having backlit keys will be more noticeable than not having a Force Touch trackpad.

Not having Touch ID on the 256GB MacBook Neo will also mean no fingerprint secure authentication for passwords, Passkey, and Apple Pay. Macs without Touch ID can still use an iPhone or Apple Watch for Apple Pay, and an Apple Watch can be used in place of Touch ID for unlocking Macs.

I/O comparison

MacBook Neo features Wi-Fi 6E (802.11ax) compared to MacBook Air with Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be). Both use Bluetooth 6. MacBook Air has Thread networking technology that isn’t available on MacBook Neo.

MacBook Neo has two USB-C ports: one has USB 3 speeds with DisplayPort while the other has USB 2 speeds. MacBook Neo also uses either of its ports for charging, so only one port is usable for data while charging.

Meanwhile, MacBook Air also has two USB-C ports, although both support Thunderbolt 4 speeds. MacBook Air can charge over MagSafe while using both USB-C ports for data.

Sound compare

In the audio department, MacBook Neo includes a dual-speaker sound system for stereo audio with “support for Spatial Audio when playing music or video with Dolby Atmos on built-in speakers.”

MacBook Air delivers more volume with a four-speaker sound system and “support for Spatial Audio when playing music or video with Dolby Atmos on built-in speakers 
Spatial Audio with dynamic head tracking when using supported models of AirPods, AirPods Pro, and AirPods Max.”

Both laptops include a 3.5 mm headphone jack, although MacBook Air includes advanced support for high-impedance headphones.

MacBook Neo uses a dual-mic array with directional beamforming, while MacBook Air uses a three-mic array with directional beamforming.

Then there’s the webcam comparison. Both machines support 1080p HD video recording and tout having an “advanced image signal processor with computational video,” but only the MacBook Air has the 12MP Center Stage camera with Desk View support. MacBook Neo drops the LED indicator light that appears when the webcam is active, relying instead on an on-screen indicator.

Which MacBook is right for you? MacBook Neo is being marketed as a great machine for first time Mac customers. Even to a seasoned Mac user, the price makes it tempting for anyone looking for a modern affordable laptop as well, although we’ll need to try it ourselves before knowing for sure.

In the meantime, Apple has moved the MacBook Air upmarket a bit with the M5 MacBook Air price bump, and upgrades to the base configuration over the last several years have made it highly capable.

What are your thoughts about the MacBook Neo versus MacBook Air comparison? Do the main specs like SSD and RAM make the price difference feel right with all of the other compromises? Share your thoughts in the comments.

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Avatar for Zac Hall Zac Hall

Zac covers Apple news, hosts the 9to5Mac Happy Hour podcast, and created SpaceExplored.com.