Apple has increased the price of the MacBook Neo from $599 to $699, a move that is as disappointing as it was inevitable amid ongoing global RAM and storage price and availability tensions.
Apple has also increased the price of a number of products, just avoiding increases on iPhone, Apple Watch, and Airpods. For now.
It’s the price of the poster child MacBook Neo that is perhaps most disappointing.
Apple launched the MacBook Neo at the $599 price point, with the price regularly cited as a key selling point in reviews of the laptop. But with a $100 price increase, things are different.
But to really understand the MacBook Neo’s price hike, we first have to think about why it came into place. And, just as importantly, why Apple should have held the line at $599, no matter what.
A18 Pro chips aren’t free
The MacBook Neo is, famously, powered by the A18 Pro. It’s a chip that was essentially a binned version of the same chip that powered the iPhone 16 Pro. And Apple had a lot of those chips that it later used in the MacBook Neo.
At first blush, that would have helped insulate the MacBook Neo from any price hikes. The A18 Pro chips were purchased before any of the RAM and storage price increases came into effect, after all.
But the MacBook Neo is a victim of its own success. Analysts had already suggested Apple was running out of binned chips and would need to buy new chips to satiate MacBook Neo demand. Those chips, though, will have been affected by the price hikes.
This alone would be enough to see Apple increase the price of a MacBook Neo beyond that $599 starting price that made it a must-buy for many.
But even if we know why the MacBook Neo now costs more, that doesn’t mean that it had to. Nor does it mean that it should.
Take one for the team, Apple
Apple is one of the few companies with the money needed to withstand price pressures like those facing PC makers right now. Apple’s hardware margins are unknown on a granular level, but are expected to be around 30%.
But to some extent, it can’t hold that price line forever.
Apple is a publicly traded company, which means it answers to shareholders and its board of directors. It also answers to its bottom line, so eating the cost of increased component prices forever was never in the cards.
But the MacBook Neo? Surely Apple could have kept its cheapest, insanely popular MacBook out of this.
There’s a case to be made for the MacBook Neo being the kind of halo product that should have withstood price pressures. It’s a product that pulls people into Apple Stores, towards iPhones, iPads, and AirPods. And it did that because of the $599 price.
Will it still do that at $699? Possibly, but there’s something about $599. And it’s something that’s now been lost, likely for good.
And, while Apple’s most popular product, the iPhone, havs escaped price increases for now, that won’t last either. Also probably forever.


