The best MacBooks to buy in 2025: The M5 is our new battery life champ

Apple's new MacBook Pro is a boring next-gen update but a great laptop nonetheless.
 By 
Haley Henschel
 on 
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the 14-inch m5 apple macbook pro
Apple's first M5-powered MacBook has landed. The average user probably doesn't need it. Credit: Joe Maldonado / Mashable

Ever since the rollout of the first M-series chips in 2020, MacBooks have dominated our guide to the best laptops.

That custom Apple silicon has delivered impressive performance and long battery life, which Windows laptops have only begun to touch via Qualcomm's Snapdragon X series CPUs. Granted, MacBooks tend to be more expensive than their Windows counterparts, especially as you add more RAM and storage. But their premium price tags accurately reflect their premium, oft-imitated design and build quality. It's no coincidence that other PC makers keep adding "Air" to their ultraportables' names.

Apple's hot streak continues with the latest M4- and M5-powered models, some of the best MacBooks (and best laptops) ever.

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Dell 14 Premium Intel Ultra 7 512GB SSD 16GB RAM 2K Laptop $999.99 (List Price $1549.99)

Overview

Best Macbook for most people

Apple MacBook Air, 15-inch (M4)

Jump to Details
Best upgrade pick (and best battery life)

Apple MacBook Pro, 14-inch (M5)

Jump to Details
Best MacBook for students

Apple MacBook Air, 13-inch (M4)

Jump to Details
Best for creative professionals

Apple MacBook Pro, 16-inch (M4 Pro)

Jump to Details
Jump to Details

Table of Contents

Which MacBook should you buy?

Apple just released a new 14-inch MacBook Pro, its first laptop with the M5 chip. Still, I think the 15-inch M4 MacBook Air is the best choice for most people. (Its 13-inch counterpart is also a good option for students since it's cheaper and a little more portable.) The M4 Air offers quiet, Pro-level power with a more portable design and a more reasonable price point. Better yet, it's frequently on sale for under $1,000 at Amazon and Best Buy.

The new 14-inch M5 MacBook Pro is the superior pick if you want a nicer 120Hz display, cooler multitasking performance, a better variety of ports, and the best battery life — and you've got some wiggle room in your budget. Its predecessor is also worth considering when it's on sale.

Below, I've detailed all of my recommendations for the best MacBooks to buy in 2025, including more options for students, bargain hunters, and creative professionals who can splurge.

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Amazon Fire HD 10 32GB Tablet (2023 Release, Black) $69.99 (List Price $139.99)

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Our Pick

The Good & The Bad

  • Very competitively priced
  • M4 chip is incredibly powerful
  • Super quiet
  • Supports two external displays with its lid open
  • Nice webcam
  • Can get hot under heavy workloads
  • Sky Blue finish is a little too subtle
  • Still stuck at 60Hz refresh rate

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the 15-inch Apple MacBook Air (M4).

Who it's for

The 15-inch version of Apple's latest MacBook Air is beautiful, long-lasting, unexpectedly peppy, and priced very fairly, making it super easy to recommend for basically anyone wanting a near-perfect ultraportable. I think most people will make good use of its larger screen, but if you want a more portable (and even more affordable) option, there's also a 13-inch size — more on it below.

If you're still hanging onto a MacBook with an Intel processor, or even an M1 model, you're a prime candidate for an upgrade to the M4 MacBook Air. The performance jump alone will be night and day.

Why we picked this

From a sheer performance standpoint, the M4 chip has effectively closed the gap between Apple's MacBook Air and Pro series. This 15-incher notched an excellent multi-core score of 14,992 in Geekbench 6's CPU test, our primary speed benchmark, making it less than two percent slower than the 14-inch M4 MacBook Pro. (The newer M5 version of the 14-inch Pro is about 17 percent faster, which still isn't a radical jump.) The more notable difference between the two models' performance lies in the way they handle the stress of multitasking. Heavy workloads are a breeze for the Pro, which has fans, but they make the fanless Air get hot to the touch.

Compared to older MacBook Airs, the 15-inch M4 MacBook Air is 22 percent faster than the 15-inch M3 model; 39 percent faster than the 15-inch M2 version; and 52 percent faster than the 13-inch M1 MacBook Air. At the time of writing, it outperforms 85 percent of the laptops in our entire testing database.

Apple could have easily used this power bump to justify a price bump, but the 15-inch M4 MacBook Air actually wound up being $100 cheaper than its predecessor. That also includes 16GB of base RAM (up from 8GB), a better 12MP webcam (up from 1080p), and open-lid support for two external monitors. More ports and a better refresh rate are on my wishlist for the next time Apple revisits the Air, but on the whole, it's a superb value in its current iteration. Mashable's Stan Schroeder christened it "the best-buy Apple laptop, period."

Details

the 14-incih m5 apple macbook pro

Apple MacBook Pro, 14-inch (M5)

Best upgrade pick (and best battery life)

The Good & The Bad

  • Best battery life
  • Better at handling heat than a MacBook Air
  • Beautiful mini-LED 120Hz display with optional nano-texture finish
  • Great mix of ports
  • Awesome keyboard, speakers, and webcam
  • Optimized for running AI models locally
  • Costs the same as its predecessor
  • On the pricier side
  • Space black colorway clings to fingerprints
  • Relatively boring update

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the 14-inch Apple MacBook Pro (M5).

Who it's for

The brand-new 14-inch M5 MacBook Pro is for deeper-pocketed shoppers and power users who want to make as few compromises as possible without going totally overboard. For an extra $400+ and a slightly bulkier design (though not by much), it gets you cooler multi-tasking performance, nicer speakers, a brighter, higher-res display with that coveted 120Hz refresh rate, a better mix of ports, and a longer battery life compared to the Air.

You might still consider buying the M4 MacBook Pro if you find it on sale at a steep discount. Now that the M5 version is out, I expect third-party retailers like Amazon and Best Buy to regularly sell it for at least $150 off. (The Apple Store has discontinued it.) While the M5 MacBook Pro lasts significantly longer, there's only a modest performance difference between the two generations, so you can save some money without losing any new features. That said, if they're the same price when you go to upgrade, just take the M5 plunge for future-proofing's sake.

Why we picked this

The 14-inch base MacBook Pro has always been the most well-rounded laptop in Apple's lineup. That continues to be the case with the new M5 model, even though it's almost a carbon copy of the M4 version. The addition of an OLED display or touchscreen capabilities would've made for a more exciting refresh — watch out for the M6 version, says the rumor mill — but it's a superb laptop nonetheless.

Performance and battery life are the most notable gen-to-gen changes, so let's get right into it. The M5 chip is now optimized for running on-device AI models, and most professionals will have a hard time stressing it out. With a Geekbench 6 multi-core score of 17,470, it's 15 percent faster than its predecessor. That's not a terribly exciting jump, but it's a jump nonetheless, and one that continues the MacBook Pro's reign as one of the fastest laptops out there. The only models in our database that outperform it are the 16-inch M4 Pro MacBook Pro and a few gaming laptops that cost $3,599.99 or more. The base M5 MacBook Pro starts at $1,599.

Even more impressively, the M5 MacBook Pro held out for 21 hours and 17 minutes in our battery life benchmark, lasting almost 30 percent longer than the M4 MacBook Pro. It's our new battery life champ, surpassing the 16-inch M4 Pro MacBook Pro by about 26 minutes.

The M5 MacBook Pro is slightly less portable compared to the Air, but not by much. (It's less than 0.2 inches thicker than both sizes and 0.1 pounds heavier than the 15-inch model.) Still, this affords it enough room for extra fixings like an HDMI port, an SDXC card slot, and a bonus Thunderbolt port, as well as an awesome hi-fi sound system with force-cancelling woofers.

The M5 MacBook Pro looks as spectacular as it sounds, as per tradition. (Apple hasn't made any drastic design changes to it since 2021.) Its mini-LED "Liquid Retina XDR" display offers a resolution of 3024 x 1964 pixels, a peak brightness of 1600 nits in HDR, and a 120Hz refresh rate. Compared to the M4 MacBook Air's standard Liquid Retina screen, it's crisper, brighter, and smoother when displaying visuals in motion — not necessary for all users, again, but nice to have if you can swing its price. It can hit the $2,000 mark pretty fast if you tack on more RAM, storage, and its nano-texture (matte) display option.

Details

The Good & The Bad

  • Affordable
  • M4 chip is super speedy
  • Very quiet
  • Supports two external displays with its lid open
  • Great webcam
  • Sky Blue finish is underwhelming
  • 60Hz refresh rate

Who it's for

Compared to its 15-inch counterpart, the 13-inch M4 MacBook Air is a better pick for college students because of its greater portability and even cheaper price.

Apple's education discount makes it just $900 to start, but third-party retailers frequently put it on sale for even less. It usurps the M1 MacBook Air as my top budget pick whenever it's marked down to $799, its lowest price on record.

Why we picked this

The 13-inch MacBook Air downgrades a couple of the 15-incher's specs to come in under $1,000 without being a dramatically worse laptop. One of said specs is its M4 GPU, which has eight cores instead of 10. You can remedy this for $100 more, but it's unnecessary if you're just using your MacBook for standard everyday tasks like browsing, emailing, and word processing.

If you are willing to spend a little extra, I'd splash out on 512GB of storage instead, which is what most top public universities recommend for college students entering the 2025 fall semester. With the 256GB base model, you'll probably need to get an external hard drive eventually.

The other key difference between the 13- and 15-inch M4 MacBook Airs (besides their screen size) lies in their sound systems. The 13-incher has four speakers, while the 15-inch model has six with force-cancelling woofers. I haven't personally listened to anything on the former, but according to our sister site PCMag, that quad-speaker setup "[produces] decent sound, enough to enjoy the occasional movie or video call without headphones." For $999 (or less), I'm content with that — in my experience, tolerable laptop speakers are few and far between.

Details

The Good & The Bad

  • Stellar battery life
  • Fastest laptop we've ever tried
  • Excellent audio
  • Great webcam
  • Useful mix of ports (including Thunderbolt 5)
  • Gorgeous mini-LED 120Hz display with optional nano-texture finish
  • Ridiculously expensive, like are you kidding?
  • Heavy

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the 16-inch MacBook Pro (M4 Pro).

Who it's for

Apple's bigger MacBook Pro, powered by the upgraded M4 Pro chip, is a blisteringly fast laptop with a price tag that's just as high as its Geekbench 6 multi-core score. As such, only creative pros like animators, graphics designers, and photo and video editors should look into it. It's excessive for the other 99 percent of the population.

Why we picked this

It's fast. It's just so, so fast.

More specifically, the 16-inch, M4 Pro-powered MacBook Pro is the best-performing laptop in our entire testing database — not just the best-performing MacBook. There's really no competition either. With a multi-core score of 22,758, it blows past the $3,599.99 Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 16 (Gen 10), our second-place winner with a score of 20,369. Throw whatever you want at this thing. It's certainly "not designed for amateurs like myself — people who think 'intensive' means opening 100 Google Chrome tabs and praying one's laptop doesn't self-combust," wrote Kimberly Gedeon, Mashable's former tech editor. "No ma'am."

Impressively, it's also the second-longest-lasting MacBook we've ever tried, running for almost 21 hours on a single charge. Its power efficiency is unreal.

There are some external differences between this larger M4 Pro model and the 14-inch M5 MacBook Pro. It has a higher-resolution display; three Thunderbolt 5 ports, the latest version of the Thunderbolt connectivity tech; and a thicker, heavier build. At 4.7 pounds, it's about as hefty as your average gaming laptop — leave it at home.

That it costs significantly more than the regular M5 MacBook Pro should be obvious. It starts at $2,499, and our upgraded review unit with 48GB of RAM, 2TB of storage, and the glare-reducing nano-texture display upgrade costs $3,649. Maybe you can put it on the company card?

Details

The Good & The Bad

  • Quiet
  • Good performance for the price
  • Supports one external display with its lid open
  • Basically the same keyboard as the newer MacBooks
  • No webcam notch
  • Almost always on sale
  • Lousy webcam
  • Worse battery life compared to newer models
  • Few ports
  • Starts with 8GB of RAM

Our review

Read Mashable's full review of the 13-inch Apple MacBook Air (M1).

Who it's for

For shoppers on the strictest budgets, the 13-inch M1 model is the cheapest Mac laptop you can still reliably buy new these days. (As of late 2025, it's almost always on sale for $599 at Walmart, Apple's exclusive retailer partner.) Its ideal buyer will have a very basic workload that generally involves one task at a time.

That said, the 13-inch M4 MacBook Air has been on sale for as cheap as $799 before. If the two models are within $200 of each other when you're ready to buy, and your budget has some flexibility, the M4 version is the indisputably better pick.

Why we picked this

This M1 model was the very first MacBook Air to run on an M-something chip. It debuted in late 2020, making it a grandma in laptop years — but since Apple didn't formally discontinue it until early 2024, it still has some hardware and software support in its future.

Here's a crash course on its spec sheet's notables: Its M1 chip is more than 50 percent slower than the 15-inch M4 MacBook Air, as previously mentioned, getting a Geekbench 6 multi-core score of 8,783 in our CPU benchmark. However, it outperforms the other $600 to $700 laptops we've tried (all of them Chromebook Plus devices), and its fanless design ensures it runs super quiet. Its battery life isn't great, but it should last you a full workday depending on the apps you use.

The M1 MacBook Air has two older Thunderbolt 3/USB-C ports, and one of them needs to be reserved for charging, but it can support one external monitor with its lid open. Its webcam has a fuzzy 720p resolution, but it lives in a thicker upper bezel instead of an obtrusive notch like the current MacBooks' cameras. It also has squared-off corners instead of round ones.

Its keyboard is almost identical to those on the M4 models, just with shorter function row keys.

The biggest thing the M1 MacBook Air has going for it is obviously its price. This is not the MacBook you should be buying if you want a really nice cutting-edge machine. It's the MacBook you should buy if you just want a workable, premium-looking Mac laptop that'll cut the mustard for a couple years, or if you're finally ditching an Intel MacBook, and you want to spend the least amount of money. I do think there's merit in that — but again, double-check the price of the 13-inch M4 MacBook Air before you commit. It's a drastic improvement for not too much more if you catch it at the right time.

Details

Topics Apple MacBook

What's new

In mid-November 2025, we added the 14-inch M5 MacBook Pro's results from our battery life test. It lasted 21 hours and 17 minutes before dying, making it the longest-lasting MacBook we've ever tried.

Frequently Asked Questions


MacBooks tend to go on sale at their deepest discounts during back-to-school season and around Black Friday, and mainly at third-party retailers like Amazon and Best Buy — not the Apple Store itself. Apple does run sales during the same time periods, but they usual entail gift card promotions or free accessories with a purchase, not straight-up savings.


First, a little info about how Apple classifies its older products. Devices that it stopped selling more than five years ago but less than seven are considered "vintage," whereas devices it stopped selling more than seven years ago are "obsolete." (Fun fact: The M1 MacBook still isn't vintage despite launching in late 2020 because Apple didn't discontinue it until early 2024.)

Vintage MacBooks are still eligible for hardware support from Apple, depending on parts availability, but it won't fix obsolete MacBooks, and you can't get parts for them from third-party service providers like Best Buy and Micro Center.

If your obsolete MacBook is still chugging along like normal, is in good condition, and doesn't seem sluggish or scant on storage, by all means, keep using it. However, if any component breaks, deteriorates, or no longer meets your needs, it's time to send it off to the great MacBook farm in the sky. (Consider recycling or donating it so it doesn't sit in a landfill forever.)

While MacBooks don't get software updates forever, it's not a total dealbreaker if yours can't run the latest version of macOS. You might be able to repurpose it as a streaming device or turn it into a Chromebook. That said, a MacBook you use as your primary laptop for school or work needs to be compatible with the current macOS in order to stay secure and continue running Apple apps.

FYI: In June 2025, Apple announced that the upcoming version of its Mac operating system (macOS Tahoe) will be the last one that's compatible with older Intel-based MacBooks from May 2020 and earlier. If your daily driver doesn't have Apple silicon yet, it's time to start thinking about upgrading it.


Some of the best Windows laptops our team has tested rival Apple notebooks' premium build quality, power, and all-day battery lives. My current favorite MacBook alternatives include:

  • The 13.8-inch Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 (powered by the Snapdragon Elite chip) performs on par with the 15-inch M4 MacBook Air and lasts nearly 23 hours on a single charge. It's not quite as thin or light as a MacBook Air, but it's still a sleek, sophisticated machine — and for what it's worth, its Sapphire colorway puts Apple's "Sky Blue" hue to shame.

  • The 14-inch Asus Zenbook A14 (with a Snapdragon X Plus chip) is 0.3 pounds lighter than a 13-inch M4 MacBook Air, and it offers almost 22 hours of battery life. Its performance is slightly below that of the 14-inch M3 Macbook Pro from last 2023.

  • The Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 is the MacBook-iest gaming laptop we've tried. Lightweight and aesthetically subdued, it can easily fit in a backpack and wouldn't look out of place in an office or classroom.

If you like the 2-in-1 form factor or want an even more affordable option, iPads also make good MacBook alternatives thanks to iPadOS' new "windowing" system.

How we tested

Mashable utilizes a rigorous hands-on testing process to review and recommend the best laptops to our readers, MacBooks included. Read our full laptop testing methodology.

Performance

We put each laptop through multiple real-world stress tests and have them run Primate Labs' Geekbench 6, a benchmark that makes it easy to compare CPU performance.

Battery life

Our battery rundown test involves playing a looped 1080p version of "Tears of Steel," a short open-source Blender movie, until the laptop dies.

Design/build quality

We evaluate the laptop's display, keyboard, touchpad, webcam, speakers, and ports. We also assess its overall aesthetic and portability.

Value

We compare the laptop to other models with similar pricing, specs, release dates, and use cases. We also look at key upgrades from its predecessor(s) and consider its future-proofing.

Mashable Image
Haley Henschel
Senior Shopping Reporter

Haley Henschel is a Chicago-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable who reviews and finds deals on popular tech, from laptops to gaming consoles and VPNs. She has years of experience covering shopping holidays and can tell you what’s actually worth buying on Black Friday and Amazon Prime Day. Her work has also explored the driving forces behind digital trends within the shopping sphere, from dupes to 12-foot skeletons.


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