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It’s not often that we get to review a bonafide bargain at Creative Bloq, but Apple has surprised us all with just how good the MacBook Neo is for its low price. It’s powered by an iPhone processor, but none the worse for it until you start trying to move 3D or video really fast.

Things like a paucity of GPU cores and a small puddle of RAM begin to show quite fast when you do that (especially compared to the best laptops for CAD or best laptops for video editing), but for most other uses, including writing, giving presentations and image editing, the Neo does well enough to make it a useful addition to any creative’s toolkit.

Apple MacBook Neo (256GB SSD) at Amazon for £569.97

MacBook Pro, but still thicker than a MacBook Air, the MacBook Neo sits right at the bottom of Apple’s laptop range in the niche formerly occupied by the 12in MacBook, which lasted from 2015 until 2017.

Hopefully this 13in model will be around for a bit longer, because it’s built to exactly the same standards as its premium siblings, with only scant evidence of cut corners. And speaking of corners, they’re just as rounded as you’d expect, echoing the edges of the screen and the OS’ application windows in their roundness.

The one sent to Creative Bloq for review is Citrus – a sort of metallic lime green – but you can choose the pinky Blush or blueberry Indigo as well, along with plain old silver. In this way it follows the lead of the iPhone and iMac, and with a bit of luck it will become the norm to see people carrying around brightly coloured laptops instead of all the grey and black models. That the OS matches its Finder windows and wallpaper to your exterior choice is a nice touch too.

Unlike the MacBook Pro, the Neo doesn’t have its name written anywhere on its body, even the bottom of the screen is unadorned, and the Apple logo on the lid is body-coloured and not deeply recessed. As such, it’s almost a stealth MacBook, if such a thing were possible for a laptop that’s bright green.

Being small, there’s less room for a large battery, but the 36.5WHr cell in the Neo does well enough, averaging just over 12 hours before needing to be charged, so should be good for a day’s work. There’s no charger in the box, but it will accept USB chargers above 20W, though there’s no fast charging if you go higher.

Design score: 4/5

AirPods Max 2 – if you’re using it for media playback, which you might want to do as it’s possible to feel the speakers vibrate beneath your wrists when you rest them alongside the trackpad.

The keys only have about 1mm of travel, the same as the MacBook Air, and are very nice to type on, but they’re not backlit. At all. This is going to be a problem for anyone who works in their car or likes to type in bed with the lights down low, but given enough external lighting the caps are clear and easy to differentiate.

The key at the top right differs depending on which model Neo you buy. Stick with the base 256GB SSD and it’s a lock button which can also be used to turn the laptop on. Splash the extra for 512GB and it becomes one of Apple’s fingerprint readers. This means if you buy the base model you’ll have to get used to typing your password every time you unlock it.

Feature score: 3/5

Geekbench: Tests the CPU for single-core and multi-core power, and the GPU for the system’s potential for gaming, image processing, or video editing. Geekbench AI tests the CPU and GPU on a variety of AI-powered and AI-boosted tasks.
Cinebench: Tests the CPU and GPU’s ability to run Cinema 4D and Redshift.

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Test

MacBook Neo (A18 Pro, £599)

MacBook Pro (M5, £1,699)

Acer Swift Edge 14 AI (Intel Core Ultra 9 288V, £1,399)

Geekbench 6 CPU single-core

3,519

4,310

1,935

Geekbench 6 CPU multi-core

8,793

16,443

9,014

Geekbench 6 GPU (OpenCL)

19,772

48,665

29,989

Cinebench 2024 single-core

146

198

93

Cinebench 2024 multi-core

332

1,104

556

Geekbench AI single-precision CPU

5,065

5,318

2,538

Geekbench AI single-precision GPU

7,577

13,219

8,476

Photoshop doesn’t do too badly. In Geekbench 6 it’s down the bottom of the table among the ASUS V16s and Acer Swift 3s of this world in terms of single-core performance, but is a little better in multi-core mode, overtaking the Core i7 of the Lenovo LOQ 15IAX9 gaming laptop to nestle just below the Acer Swift Edge 14 AI, which uses an Intel Core Ultra 9 288V.

The tiny GPU sits with the smallest integrated graphics chips at the bottom of the table too. Where it does well is in AI applications run on the CPU, where it scores much the same as the MacBook Pro with M5 Max (they’re probably using the same NPU), but of course a GPU is much faster, and it sinks to the bottom quarter of the table when compared with bigger graphics chips.

In Photoshop it’s near the bottom of the table but far from the worst we’ve seen, and it’s perfectly capable of importing, cropping, colour correcting and messing about with a few layers. The Premiere Pro test timed out a couple of times thanks to the sheer amount of time the A18 Pro needed to churn through video encoding, and at one point slowed down so much that the mouse pointer froze on-screen, but it got there in the end. None of its scores were particularly high, but this is clearly not the kind of work the Neo is made for.

This is actually a pretty good showing for something so cheap that’s running on an iPhone processor, positioning the Neo as a great secondary machine, perhaps alongside a Mac Studio for the heavy lifting. If you’re into music production, YouTubers have shown the Neo running Logic Pro and Ableton quite happily at up to around 150 tracks, just taking a bit longer to do things than an M5 machine.

Performance score: 3/5

Apple MacBook Neo

(Image credit: Future / Ian Evenden)

iPad Pro or a Chromebook, and will make a fine secondary machine, or your primary one if you’re running productivity apps rather than trying to render.

Value score: 5/5

MacBook Air M5 product shots

It’s incredibly well built, the screen is predictably great and it’s loaded with a bunch of ease-of-use features for anyone, plus the addition of Apple Intelligence adds an AI-shaped layer to the experience of having one.

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i Gen 9 product shot

Lenovo

Yoga Pro 9i Gen 10 Aura Edition

Everything you want and need from a creator-focused laptop. It’s fast, responsive, and built to keep up with demanding workflows.

Geekom GeekBook A14 Pro

The Geekom GeekBook X14 Pro impresses by weighing in at a smidge under a kilo but still managing to pack a Core Ultra 9 processor.