Skip to main content

Why the M1 MacBook Air is still an excellent buy today

The M1 MacBook Air is almost a year old. Before it launched in 2020, we all eagerly anticipated just how the new M1 Apple Silicon would transform the humble MacBook Air into a fairly powerful laptop.

As we discovered, its transformation was rather magical.

Recommended Videos

You know what’s even more magical? Today, nearly a full year later, the M1 MacBook Air remains a fantastic purchase, and it will stay that way throughout the rest of 2021.

The M1 still reigns

Macbook Air M1
Mark Coppock/Digital Trends / Digital Trends

The M1 was Apple’s first attempt at its own custom ARM chip for Macs, and it was an overwhelming success. But the devices themselves, weren’t anything new. The MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, and Mac mini all got the same M1 chip, but that doesn’t mean the jump in performance was equivalent.

The MacBook Air was had featured an underpowered, 15-watt Intel chip. It wasn’t fanless, and it had a hard time keeping up with anything beyond basic computing. A Zoom call would make the fans spin up and the surface temperatures rise, and ultimately, the MacBook Air just didn’t have the performance to be worth the $999 price.

The M1 changed all that. The MacBook Air finally had the performance it needed to make spending $999 on it feel like a steal. Compared to Windows laptops of the same price, the MacBook Air flies. You can play games like Fortnite on it with absolutely zero fan noise. The same goes for video calls. All of a sudden, the MacBook Air became the go-to college laptop again.

Compared to the MacBook Air, the MacBook Pro, was now the one that felt underpowered. It’s every bit as powerful — and the graphics performance are slightly better — but the $300 price difference didn’t feel justified.

It left the MacBook Air as the most impressive M1 device at launch, and made sure that it had legs to last all the way through 2021.

Its sequel is a ways out

Image credit: Jon Prosser Image used with permission by copyright holder

We recently wrote about why you shouldn’t buy the MacBook Pro right now. Both the 14-inch and 16-inch models are about to get a significant redesign, as well as huge performance bump thanks to the rumored M1X chip. Buying the 13-inch MacBook Pro now would leave you regretting your purchase in just a few months.

The MacBook Air, on the other hand, is in a completely different position. There is, undoubtedly, a new MacBook Air in the works. Leaks from earlier this year point to a redesign that will change the keyboard and bezels to white to match the 24-inch iMac, as well as offer new chassis colors.

Even if this rumor turned out to be true, from what we can tell, it won’t come out until well into 2022. And even then, I could see Apple offering the old M1 configuration as a cheaper option.

So, if you’re considering the M1 MacBook Air right now or even sometime in the next few months, you can be sure it’s a safe purchase that will make you happy for many years to come.

Luke Larsen
Senior Editor, Computing
Luke Larsen is the Senior Editor of Computing, managing all content covering laptops, monitors, PC hardware, Macs, and more.
Leaked M4 MacBook Pro benchmarks reveal incredible performance
MacBook Pro with M4

The M4 MacBook Pros launched this week with plenty to talk about. Performance, however, wasn't the focus of all the attention. Apple didn't provide many direct comparisons of how much more powerful the M4 MacBook Pro is over the previous generation of chips.

But now some leaked benchmarks for the M4 series have been put online, and they reveal just how significant of an uplift the M4 Max and M4 Pro bring. Over on X (formerly Twitter) user James Atkinson discovered some results from a Geekbench 6 benchmark for the M4 Max chip, which revealed 4,060 single-core and 26,675 multi-core scores.

Read more
The era of 8GB RAM is over
Mac Mini with M4

This week, Apple exorcised its Mac lineup of one particular tech spec that has been a PC standard for almost a decade. I'm talking, of course, about selling PCs with 8GB of RAM.

Not only did Apple remove 8GB configurations from its new M4 MacBook Pros, Mac mini, and iMac, it even went back to its lineup of MacBook Air models and bumped everything up to 16GB. Apple was widely expected to make this change on the M4 MacBook Pro after receiving pushback on last year's M3 model, but not on the MacBook Air.

Read more
The MacBook Air just got a surprise upgrade that everyone will love
The MacBook Air on a white table.

Apple announced an unexpected change to the current M2 and M3 MacBook Air today: more memory. Alongside the overarching bump to RAM in base configurations of the M4 iMac, Mac mini, and MacBook Pro, Apple also announced that the 8GB versions of the M2 and M3 MacBook Air have also been removed from the lineup.

Starting today, the M2 MacBook Air and M3 MacBook Air will both have 16GB as the starting configuration. But here's the kicker: Apple isn't raising prices. That means if you'd spent $1,199 on an M2 MacBook Air with 16GB of RAM yesterday, you'd be getting it today for just $999. As much as that'll sting for recent buyers, it's great news for people buying MacBook Airs this holiday season.

Read more