MacBook Air vs. MacBook Pro: Which MacBook Should I Buy?

If you are having trouble deciding between the cheaper and lighter MacBook Air or spending more for the more powerful MacBook Pro, then you’ve come to the right place. The MacBook Air and Pro don’t look all that different from one another, but there are key differences  — from cost and components to performance and battery life — that you need to know to pick the right one. The M3 MacBook Air is the best laptop for most people, but there are some good reasons to spend more for a M4 MacBook Pro

Let’s break down the MacBook Air against the MacBook Pro to see where and how these two laptop lines differ and which one is the best MacBook for you.

Newer Pro, older Air

No one wants to buy a laptop only to see it get updated a week or a month after you pull the trigger on a purchase. So, it’s important to know which MacBook is newer. The MacBook Pro gets the nod here. It was updated more recently, with Apple rolling out its latest M4 processors to the MacBook Pro near the end of last year. Meanwhile, it’s been nearly a year since Apple updated the MacBook Air; it received an M3 refresh last March. 

Apple will almost assuredly update the MacBook Air soon. Rumors point to the Air getting an M4 update this spring and Apple introducing an M5 MacBook Pro in the fall. 

Read more: Best MacBook for 2025

At this point, it’s worth waiting for the arrival of the M4 MacBook Air if you can (rumors have it arriving as soon as this month). If you are leaning toward the Pro, however, now is a good time to buy since we are closer to the introduction of the M4 Pro than we are to the anticipated release of an M5 Pro later this year.

Now that you know where each line stands in its refresh schedule, let’s take a look at the current pricing of the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro.

Apple MacBook Air M3 13-inch and 15-inch laptops on a wood table.

The current MacBook Air features Apple’s M3 processor and is available in 13-inch and 15-inch sizes.

Josh Goldman/CNET

MacBook Air vs. Pro: Cost and components

The MacBook Air is available with a 13.6-inch or a 15.3-inch display. The 13-inch Air starts at $1,099, and the 15-inch Air starts at $1,299. Both entry-level models feature Apple’s M3 processor along with 16GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD. There is a slight difference in GPU cores between these two starting models — the 13-inch Air’s M3 chip has eight CPU cores and eight GPU cores, and the 15-inch Air’s M3 chip has eight CPU cores and 10 GPU cores.

MacBook Air vs. Pro components

13-inch MacBook Air (M3) 15-inch MacBook Air (M3) 14-inch MacBook Pro (M4) 14-inch MacBook Pro (M4 Pro) 16-inch MacBook Pro (M4 Pro) CPU M3 M3 M4 M4 Pro M4 Pro No. of CPU cores 8 8 10 12 14 No. of GPU cores 8 10 10 16 20 Starting RAM 16GB 16GB 16GB 24GB 24GB Starting storage 256GB 256GB 512GB 512GB 512GB Starting price $1,099 $1,299 $1,599 $1,999 $2,499

(Apple sells an M2 MacBook Air starting at $999, and Walmart has the M1 MacBook Air for $649, but I’m not going to include either of these budget models here. If you are waffling between the Air or Pro, then I’m going to assume that you have already decided to buy the M3 Air at a minimum and are wondering if you should step up to the M4 Pro.)

The MacBook Pro is available with a 14.2-inch or 16.2-inch display. The 14-inch Pro starts at $1,599, and the 16-inch Pro starts at $2,499. The 16-inch model has such a higher starting price because it has a more powerful M4 Pro chip, while the base model of the 14-inch Pro features an M4 (non-Pro) chip.

The M4 Pro chip in the 16-inch MacBook Pro is truly a pro-level processor, with 14 CPU cores and 20 GPU cores, while the M4 chip in the 14-inch model has 10 CPU cores and 10 GPU cores. 

You can, however, get the M4 Pro chip in the 14-inch Pro. The step-up model in the 14-inch MacBook Pro series costs $1,999 and features an M4 Pro chip with 12 CPU cores and 16 GPU cores. The next model in the series costs $2,399 and features the same 14-CPU, 20-GPU M4 Pro found in the entry-level MacBook Pro 16.

Apple MacBook Pro 14 (M4, late 2024) 1319Apple MacBook Air 13 (M3, early 2024) 1097Apple MacBook Air 15 (M3, early 2024) 960

Given the long runtimes for both the MacBook Air and Pro (both offer all-day battery life) the difference in weight between the two is the larger factor if mobility is a chief concern. The MacBook Air is thinner and lighter — better for students crisscrossing campus every day and those who commute daily or travel regularly. Even the larger 15-inch Air is a better travel companion than the smaller 14-inch Pro.

MacBook Air vs. Pro: Display and speakers

MacBook Pro models have a slightly higher-resolution display and a higher pixels-per-inch count (224ppi on the Air to the Pro’s 254ppi), but the bigger differences between the displays are their brightness, HDR support and refresh rate.

The Macbook Pro’s Liquid Retina XDR display is a mini-LED panel rated for 1,000 nits in SDR and 1,600 nits in HDR. The MacBook Air’s Liquid Retina display is rated for 500 nits, which is bright enough for most lighting environments but lacks the range and contrast to make HDR content pop. 

You’ll also get smoother movement in videos and games on the MacBook Pro’s 120Hz ProMotion panel. The MacBook Air offers a standard 60Hz refresh rate.

The MacBook Air and Pro each offer good audio output for a laptop, but the Pro’s sound is better. The MacBook Pro features a six-speaker array, and the Air has four speakers.

Apple MacBook Pro 16 (M4 Pro, late 2024) 22683Apple MacBook Pro 14 (M4, late 2024) 15134Apple MacBook Air 13 (M3, early 2024) 12063Apple MacBook Air 15 (M3, early 2024) 12034

Geekbench 6 CPU (single-core)

Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

Apple MacBook Pro 16 (M4 Pro, late 2024) 1744Apple MacBook Pro 14 (M4, late 2024) 999Apple MacBook Air 15 (M3, early 2024) 591Apple MacBook Air 13 (M3, early 2024) 541

Cinebench 2024 CPU (single-core)

Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

Apple MacBook Pro 16 (M4 Pro, late 2024) 9037Apple MacBook Pro 14 (M4, late 2024) 3970Apple MacBook Air 15 (M3, early 2024) 3311Apple MacBook Air 13 (M3, early 2024) 3074

Should I buy a MacBook Air or MacBook Pro?

Creative pros and hobbyists who need to run demanding graphics applications would be better served by investing in a MacBook Pro with an M4 Pro processor. The superior CPU and GPU performance will allow such power users to complete creative workloads more quickly. The cheapest MacBook Pro with an M4 Pro processor costs $1,999, however, which is considerably more expensive than a MacBook Air. 

The added memory you get with the MacBook Pro models that cost $1,999 and up helps justify the higher cost. You might not need the 48GB of RAM of the M4 Pro-based MacBook Pro we tested, but the 24GB of RAM you get with any M4 Pro-based MacBook Pro will certainly serve you well compared with the 16GB of RAM offered on the MacBook Air or baseline 14-inch M4 MacBook Pro.

The only compelling reason for the $1,599 M4-based MacBook Pro I can see is the HDR ProMotion display if you watch or work with a lot of HDR content. Or you are sensitive to video stutter on a 60Hz display. If neither of these characteristics describes you, then you are better off spending more for the greater performance of an M4 Pro-based MacBook Pro or saving some money and getting the more affordable and portable MacBook Air.

Read more: Best MacBook deals

For general home use, where you primarily use Chrome, Gmail, Google Docs and Sheets with perhaps the occasional project in iMovie or Garage Band, the M3 MacBook Air offers ample performance and is the better deal. The 13-inch MacBook Air provides a ton of value at $1,099 and can almost always be found discounted to less than $1,000. For most people, it’s the best laptop.

And if you want the larger screen size, you can opt for the 15-inch Air instead of needing to spend a premium on a MacBook Pro. Despite its larger display, the 15-inch Air is still thinner and lighter than the 14-inch Pro — while costing hundreds less.

System configurations we tested

Apple MacBook Air 13 (M3, early 2024) Apple MacOS Sonoma 14.4; Apple M3 (8-core CPU, 10-core GPU); 16GB RAM; 512GB SSD Apple MacBook Air 15 (M3, early 2024) Apple MacOS Sonoma 14.4; Apple M3 (8-core CPU, 10-core GPU); 16GB RAM; 512GB SSD Apple MacBook Pro 14 (M4, late 2024) Apple MacOS Sequoia 15.1; Apple M4 (10-core CPU, 10-core GPU); 16GB RAM; 1TB SSD Apple MacBook Pro 16 (M4 Pro, late 2024) Apple MacOS Sequoia 15.1; Apple M4 Pro (14-core CPU, 20-core GPU); 48GB RAM; 2TB SSD

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