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MacBook Neo Expected to 'Reshape' Laptop Market in Major Way

Apple's new MacBook Neo could help the company grow notebook shipments by nearly 8% this year, even as the broader laptop market faces a hefty downturn, according to a new report from TrendForce.

MacBook Neo Feature Pastel 1
The research firm estimates global notebook shipments will fall 9.2% year-over-year in 2026, with the potential for steeper declines if demand stays weak. Rising memory and CPU costs are said to have pushed most PC makers to pare back their product lines and play it safe with inventory. Meanwhile, Apple is going in the other direction.

Announced on Wednesday with a starting price of $599, the MacBook Neo is targeting the $500-$800 mainstream segment, which is typically dominated by Windows laptops and Chromebooks aimed at education and general productivity users. With an education discount, the Neo's starting price drops to $499 – well below the $1,000 floor that has defined the MacBook lineup for years.

TrendForce projects Apple's notebook shipments will grow 7.7% in 2026, lifting macOS market share to 13.2%. The MacBook Neo alone could account for 4 to 5 million units shipped, according to the firm. That said, the report notes that a deciding factor may be how consumers respond to the 8GB memory configuration, given that Apple doesn't offer a RAM upgrade option.

TrendForce credits Apple's in-house silicon and standardized product specs for Apple's ability to undercut competitors on price just as component costs are rising. Custom Apple silicon chips reduce dependence on external CPU suppliers, while Apple's concentrated memory configurations are said to give the company stronger bargaining power with suppliers. It's a different story for Windows OEMs, which tend to have more fragmented product portfolios that make cost management harder when component costs are volatile.

trendforce shipment forecast
The MacBook Neo launches next Wednesday, March 11. If it manages to gain traction in the entry-level segment, TrendForce claims it could reshape the pricing dynamics across the global notebook market.

Top Rated Comments

4 weeks ago
I’m sure it will sell quite well. Maybe even be the biggest selling MacBook. I personally think it will hurt sales of iPads more.
Score: 26 Votes (Like | Disagree)
4 weeks ago

Do people really choose their computing platform purely based on the price of the device? I somehow doubt that.
When I was in university I would have loved a Macbook but couldn't afford one. So yes, I definitely chose my computing platform purely based on the price of the device.
Score: 23 Votes (Like | Disagree)
4 weeks ago
Apple had a bit of fortuitous timing with the release of the NEO, during a period where other competitors are challenged to significantly undercut the Neo due rising CPU and memory costs. Apple is going to sell boatloads of these, especially this summer ahead of school in the fall.
Score: 19 Votes (Like | Disagree)
DMG35 Avatar
4 weeks ago
People will also want these just for the colors. My wife has a M4 MacBook air fully spec'd and she wants to get rid of it just because she likes the pink Neo Lol.
Score: 18 Votes (Like | Disagree)
4 weeks ago
This will be a grand slam device for Apple. Apple introducing a “cheap” but quality laptop when other manufacturers are likely having to raise prices to deal with RAM and SSD market craziness is going to cause some other manufacturers to sweat a little.

What happens is when new people try a Mac, then they are more likely to buy other Apple products and use Apple services.

The risk is if quality is compromised, but that doesn’t appear to be an issue. The MacBook Neo is good quality (and way better than pretty much anything in the Windows world at this price range), just more limited in features than other Macs.
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
yourmn Avatar
4 weeks ago

Of that I'm definitely not convinced.

Kids are raised "touch first" and iPads are incredible for content consumption and gaming.

I'm not convinced at all that kids are looking for a cheap low end macOS device.
The kids might not be, but the parents often look at what the cheapest options are.

Child asks for a 'Mac', parent gets what is cheapest.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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