Ipad pro vs macbook air

6 min read

iPad User INVESTIGATES

Apple’s hardware line-up is get ting increasingly confusing. Charlot te Henry tries to unpick it all

There is little more thrilling for an Apple fan than getting to pick out a new Mac. You walk into the shop and tell the staff member which new essential work item you’re going to buy. Almost as thrilling is building your perfect machine in the online store.

In recent years, that process has become a lot more confusing though. Products across the company’s range seem to have become more and more similar, and it’s not just across the Mac range. Some iPads are now so powerful it is hard to distinguish them from what we would traditionally think of as a laptop.

So, for example, assuming you do not need the most powerful Mac and are mostly looking for portability, do you want a MacBook Air or an iPad Pro? Making a decision based on both price and features is not straightforward.

The lowest specification MacBook Air available at the time of writing contains the M1 chip, an 8-core CPU and 7-core GPU. The iPad Pro, meanwhile, also has an 8 ‐core CPU but boasts a 10-core GPU and M2 chip. The MacBook Air does have a slightly larger display – 13.3 inches compared to 11 or 12.9 inches offered by the iPad Pro – but that is one of the only key criteria on which the laptop ‘wins’.

“Making a decision on both price and features is not straightforward”
Image Credit: Apple Inc.
At the launch of the M1 iPad Air, Apple coined the ‘Your next computer is not a computer’ slogan in a TV ad.
Image Credit: Apple Inc.

The iPad Pro starts at £899/$799 for the 11-inch or £1,249/$1099 for the 12.9-inch display. However, including a keyboard adds either £219/$199 (Folio Keyboard) or £379/$349 (Magic Keyboard) to the bill. The MacBook Air starts at £999/$999. There is a newer M2 version of the laptop available but this doesn’t exactly help clear up the confusion! It can be purchased with a 10-core CPU and 13.6-inch display for £1,549/$1,499. It all just means both the laptop and iPad are running on the same Apple silicon and cost similar amounts.

Far from worrying about this development, Apple has been keen to embrace it. When it released an iPad Air with the M1 chip in March 2022 its advert for the device ended with the tagline “your next computer is not a computer”.

Confusion reigns

Dave Hamilton has spent years giving Apple users advice on the popular Mac Geek Gab podcast. He told us:

“Today’s iPad vs MacBook decision really comes down to what, specifically, you plan to do with your device. The MacBook can do ‘everything’, but it’s not (quite) as convenient for reading or quick, on-the-go interactions. If the apps you need are available on iPad and workflows are su