Quick Take
The MacBook Air M5 is what happens when Apple keeps refining an already excellent laptop instead of reinventing it. On paper, the upgrades feel modest. The design is unchanged, the display is still 60Hz, and the M5 chip isn’t delivering the dramatic leap that makes last year’s model instantly obsolete. Yet after spending two weeks with it, none of that really matters.
What stands out is how effortless everything feels. The M5 delivers more performance than most users will ever need, battery life remains excellent, the keyboard and trackpad are still among the best in the business, and macOS Tahoe continues to benefit from Apple’s tightly integrated ecosystem.
The lack of an OLED display and the continued presence of the notch prevent it from being perfect, but they are minor complaints in an otherwise outstanding package.
If you’re coming from an Intel Mac, an M1 MacBook Air, or an ageing Windows laptop, the MacBook Air M5 is one of the easiest laptop recommendations I’ve made in years. It’s not revolutionary. It’s just exceptionally good at almost everything.
Apple MacBook Air M5 Specifications
| Specification | Apple MacBook Air M5 (13-inch) |
|---|---|
| Model Name | Apple MacBook Air M5 |
| Operating System | macOS 26 Tahoe |
| Processor | Apple M5 (10-core CPU) |
| NPU | 16-core Neural Engine |
| Graphics | Apple 8-core GPU |
| Memory | 16GB Unified Memory |
| Storage | 512GB SSD |
| Display | 13.6-inch Liquid Retina IPS Display |
| 2560 × 1664 resolution | |
| 60Hz refresh rate | |
| 500 nits brightness | |
| P3 Wide Colour Gamut | |
| True Tone Technology | |
| Support for 1 billion colors | |
| Screen-to-Body Ratio | Not officially specified |
| Build Material | Recycled Aluminium Unibody |
| Color Options | Sky Blue, Silver, Starlight, Midnight |
| Camera | 12MP Center Stage Camera |
| Wireless Connectivity | Wi-Fi 7 |
| Bluetooth 6 | |
| Ports | 2x Thunderbolt 4 / USB-C |
| 1x MagSafe 3 charging port | |
| 1x 3.5mm headphone jack | |
| Audio | Four-speaker sound system |
| Spatial Audio support | |
| Dolby Atmos support | |
| Three-microphone array | |
| Keyboard | Backlit Magic Keyboard with Touch ID |
| Touchpad | Force Touch Haptic Trackpad |
| Battery | Built-in lithium-polymer battery |
| Battery Life (Tested) | 13 hours 28 minutes |
| Charging | MagSafe 3 / USB-C charging |
| Cooling | Fanless passive cooling |
| Dimensions (W × D × H) | 30.41 × 21.50 × 1.13 cm |
| Weight | 1.24 kg |
I bought the base-model MacBook Air M5, specifically the 13-inch version with 16GB of unified memory and 512GB of storage. No upgrades, no custom configuration, and no attempt to justify spending even more money on a laptop – instead, the version most people are likely to buy.
Here’s the short version of this review: stop worrying about performance.
Reviewers will show benchmark charts because that’s what we do. Those charts will tell you the M5 is faster than the M4. They are correct. The M5 is faster. Apple has once again made the number bigger.
The problem is that the numbers stopped mattering a while ago.
The M4 MacBook Air already had more performance than most people would ever need. The M5 simply adds even more horsepower to a machine that was never struggling in the first place. It is a bit like replacing a sports car with an even faster sports car when your daily commute consists mostly of traffic lights and roadworks.
What you actually notice is how effortlessly everything works.
I’ll admit that unboxing the MacBook Air gave me a genuine little buzz. Partly because it is a gorgeous piece of hardware. The Sky Blue finish is particularly lovely, looking silver from some angles before revealing a subtle blue tint when the light catches it.
The bigger reason is that I’m now in my late 30s, and this is apparently what excitement looks like. Some people buy concert tickets. I admire laptop finishes.
Booting up takes around 30 seconds, although I should mention that about half of that time is spent entering my password incorrectly. Once you’re in, everything feels instant. Safari opens in less than a second. Apple Music launches before I’ve fully registered, clicking on it.
Coming from an ageing Windows laptop, the difference is striking. My old machine approached every task with the enthusiasm of someone being asked to help a friend move house on a Sunday morning. The MacBook Air M5, meanwhile, treats every request like it has had three coffees and a motivational speech.
And honestly, that’s the real story here. Not benchmarks, not charts, just a laptop that feels effortlessly fast all the time.
Design
Quick take: Apple’s familiar design remains elegant, portable, and surprisingly difficult to fault.
If you’ve seen a MacBook Air released at any point over the last three years, you’ve already seen the MacBook Air M5.
That’s not necessarily a criticism. Apple landed on a winning design back in 2022 when it introduced the M2 MacBook Air, and the company has spent the years since doing what Apple does best: changing almost nothing and hoping nobody notices. To be fair, when the design is this good, it’s difficult to argue with the strategy.
My review unit is the 15-inch model in Sky Blue, and I genuinely think it is the colour to get. Depending on the lighting, it shifts between silver and a subtle metallic blue. It is understated enough to take into a boardroom, but distinctive enough that you won’t immediately lose track of it among a sea of silver laptops in a coffee shop.
The chassis itself remains carved from aluminium and feels every bit as premium as you’d expect from a laptop at this price point. The flat surfaces and rounded edges strike a nice balance between modern and comfortable. Four years into this design language, it still looks elegant, even if it no longer turns heads the way it once did.
Then there is the notch.
Look, I know some people stopped noticing it years ago. I haven’t. Every time I open the lid, my eyes go straight to that little black chunk hanging down from the top of the display. Apple insists it is there to house the webcam. I understand the reasoning. I still don’t like it. It is the only part of the MacBook Air’s design that feels like a compromise rather than a deliberate choice.
Port selection remains functional rather than exciting. On the left side, you’ll find MagSafe charging alongside two Thunderbolt 4 ports. The right side gets a solitary 3.5mm headphone jack, which feels a bit lonely over there.
My biggest complaint is one I’ve had for years. I wish Apple would place a USB-C port on either side of the laptop. MagSafe is excellent and remains one of Apple’s smartest features, but giving users the flexibility to plug accessories or chargers into either side would make daily life just a little easier. Instead, you’re still occasionally doing the awkward desk dance where the cable is on the wrong side, and you’re trying to convince yourself it doesn’t bother you.
The real magic of the MacBook Air, though, is how little you notice it when carrying it around. Even the larger 15-inch model feels absurdly thin and light. Sliding it into a backpack almost feels like you’ve forgotten to pack a laptop at all. The fanless design helps here, allowing Apple to keep the profile remarkably slim without sacrificing rigidity.
And somehow, despite having no fan whatsoever, the M5 chip barely seems to care. Whether I’m juggling browser tabs, editing photos, writing, streaming music, or bouncing between half a dozen apps at once, the MacBook Air remains cool, quiet, and completely unbothered. No noise, no drama, no sudden bursts of fan activity.
Just effortless performance wrapped in one of the best laptop designs Apple has ever produced.
Score: 9/10
Display
Quick take: A sharp, colour-accurate display that prioritises consistency over OLED flashiness.
Apple may call it a Liquid Retina display, but what you’re actually getting is a 13.6-inch IPS panel with a resolution of 2560 x 1664 and a standard 60Hz refresh rate. The screen is technically larger than its “13-inch” branding suggests, and that extra space is immediately noticeable when compared to smaller ultraportables.
It’s also a very Apple display in the best possible sense.
The MacBook Air’s panel is sharp enough that text looks printed onto the screen rather than rendered on it. Whether you’re writing documents, editing photos, or spending your afternoon with an unhealthy number of browser tabs open, everything looks crisp and clean.
Watching the recently released Spider-Man: Brand New Day trailer proved to be a particularly good showcase for the display. Spider-Man’s bright red-and-blue suit stood out vividly against darker cityscapes, while shadow-heavy scenes retained plenty of detail. The colors looked rich without feeling exaggerated, which is something Apple continues to do better than many rivals.
Part of that experience comes from Apple’s True Tone technology, which automatically adjusts the display’s colour temperature based on ambient lighting conditions. It sounds like a gimmick until you spend a few days using it. Then every other display starts looking slightly off.
The MacBook Air’s display is also surprisingly colour accurate. In our usage, it delivers excellent coverage of both the DCI-P3 and sRGB colour spaces, putting it remarkably close to the more expensive MacBook Pro in terms of colour reproduction. For photographers, content creators, and anyone who cares about accurate colors, that’s impressive considering the Air uses a standard LED panel rather than the mini-LED technology found on Apple’s professional machines.
Of course, there’s one aspect of the display that remains divisive: the notch.
Nestled into the top of the screen, the notch houses the webcam and cuts into the menu bar. If you’re seeing it for the first time, it can look a little odd, particularly in light mode where the black cutout stands out against brighter backgrounds.
The good news is that the practical impact is almost nonexistent. Apple effectively uses the area above the traditional display boundary for the menu bar, meaning you still get a full 16:10 workspace below it. In other words, you’re not losing screen real estate. You’re actually gaining some.
And when you’re watching films or YouTube videos, the notch mostly disappears from view because most content doesn’t extend into that section of the display anyway.
The only real criticism is that OLED displays are becoming increasingly common on premium Windows laptops. Those panels still offer deeper blacks and more dramatic contrast than Apple’s IPS technology can match.
Even so, the MacBook Air’s display remains one of the best laptop screens available today. It is bright, sharp, colour accurate, and comfortable to use for hours at a time. It may not have the visual fireworks of OLED, but it gets almost everything else right.
Score: 9/10
Keyboard, trackpad, and speakers
Quick take: Apple still sets the benchmark for everyday laptop usability and comfort.
If there’s one area where Apple continues to embarrass much of the laptop industry, it’s the everyday stuff. Not the processor. Not the AI features. The things you interact with hundreds of times every day.
Let’s start with the keyboard.
On paper, the MacBook Air’s keyboard isn’t particularly exciting. Key travel is relatively shallow compared to some traditional laptop keyboards, and mechanical keyboard enthusiasts will probably continue writing angry comments about it until the end of time. But in actual use, it’s excellent.
The layout is logical, spacious, and refreshingly free from unnecessary experimentation. The full-sized function row remains intact, the inverted-T arrow keys are exactly where they should be, and the entire keyboard feels precise and predictable. After a few minutes of typing, it simply disappears beneath your fingers, which is arguably the highest compliment any keyboard can receive.
As someone who spends most of the day staring at a blinking cursor and pretending deadlines don’t exist, I found typing on the MacBook Air genuinely enjoyable.
My only complaint is a surprisingly petty one. Apple has continued its recent obsession with replacing text labels on keys like Tab, Shift, Enter, Caps Lock, and Delete with symbols. The icons are familiar if you’ve spent years using iPhones and iPads, but I still think actual words are clearer. This isn’t a functional problem by any means. Touch typists won’t care. It’s just one of those tiny design decisions that makes me wonder whether someone at Apple is being paid by the glyph.
The power button doubles as a Touch ID sensor and remains one of the most convenient authentication systems available on any laptop. A quick tap and you’re logged in before you’ve had time to remember what your password actually is.
Then there’s the trackpad.
At this point, reviewing Apple’s trackpads feels a bit like reviewing gravity. They’re so consistently good that it’s difficult to find new ways to praise them.
The large glass surface remains among the best in the business. It’s smooth, responsive, and absurdly accurate. More importantly, the haptic feedback system continues to perform its party trick of convincing your brain that you’re physically clicking something when, in reality, you’re not.
Unlike traditional trackpads that hinge from the top, the MacBook Air registers clicks evenly across the entire surface. Whether you’re clicking near the top, bottom, or corner, the experience feels the same. Once you get used to it, many Windows trackpads suddenly feel strangely primitive.
macOS gestures are equally brilliant. Swiping between desktops, launching Mission Control, or zooming with pinch gestures all feel fluid and intuitive. Everything responds instantly, making navigation feel effortless.
The speakers deserve credit, too. Given how impossibly thin the MacBook Air is, the sound quality is genuinely impressive. Music sounds clear and detailed, vocals come through beautifully, and podcasts are crisp enough that you’ll suddenly realize how many people say “um” professionally.
That said, physics remains undefeated. While the four-speaker system delivers plenty of clarity, it can’t quite match the bass response of thicker laptops or Apple’s own MacBook Pro models. Drums sound punchy, but they don’t have the chest-thumping weight that larger speaker systems can produce.
Still, for a laptop this thin, the overall package is remarkably good. The keyboard is excellent, the trackpad remains the industry benchmark, and the speakers are more than capable of handling everything from work calls to late-night Netflix sessions.
In typical Apple fashion, none of these features is flashy. They just work exceptionally well, every single day.
Score: 9/10
Camera
Quick take: The 12MP webcam delivers sharp, natural video quality for every call.
Nestled inside the controversial notch is a 12MP webcam, and thankfully, it’s a genuinely good one.
Video calls on the MacBook Air look sharp, detailed, and natural. During testing, the camera captured everything with impressive clarity, including individual strands of hair and, somewhat less helpfully, every sign that I probably should have gone to bed earlier the night before. The camera is honest, perhaps a little too honest.
Still, that’s exactly what you want from a webcam. Colors look accurate, detail levels are strong, and image quality is comfortably ahead of the grainy, washed-out webcams that continue to plague many Windows laptops.
Apple also includes its Center Stage feature, which automatically tracks and keeps you in frame as you move around during video calls. It’s a clever piece of technology that works surprisingly well, particularly if you’re the sort of person who likes to pace around while talking.
Personally, I rarely make much use of it because my video call strategy consists largely of sitting in one spot and trying not to accidentally leave myself on mute for half the meeting.
For most people, though, Center Stage is a nice bonus rather than a headline feature.
The bigger story is that the MacBook Air’s webcam is simply reliable. Whether you’re jumping into a work meeting, catching up with family, or pretending your camera isn’t on while frantically looking for a document, it delivers consistently excellent image quality with minimal effort required.
Score: 8/10
Software
Quick take: macOS Tahoe refines the experience while Apple’s ecosystem remains unmatched.
The MacBook Air M5 ships with macOS 26 Tahoe, which brings Apple’s biggest visual redesign in years. Whether that’s exciting or mildly concerning depends entirely on how much you enjoy translucent user interfaces.
The headline feature is something Apple calls “Liquid Glass,” a new design language shared across macOS, iOS, and iPadOS. In practice, this means menus, buttons,s and interface elements now have a glass-like appearance that reflects and refracts content behind them. Apple wants it to feel modern and dynamic. Cynics might describe it as the software equivalent of discovering the transparency slider in Photoshop and refusing to stop using it.
When Liquid Glass was first revealed, reactions were mixed. Some people loved the fresh look, while others immediately began demanding Apple dial it back. To the company’s credit, it listened. Several tweaks during the beta period reduced some of the more aggressive visual effects, and the final version feels much more restrained.
Thankfully, macOS seems to be the platform that benefits most from the redesign. While Liquid Glass can occasionally feel a little overenthusiastic on iPhones and iPads, its implementation on the Mac is more subtle. After a few days of use, I largely stopped thinking about it, which is probably the best outcome for any interface redesign.
Beyond the visual refresh, Tahoe introduces several genuinely useful features.
Live Translation is one of the most impressive additions, bringing real-time language translation to Messages and FaceTime conversations. The revamped Phone app also makes its way to the Mac, allowing calls and communication features to feel more integrated across Apple’s ecosystem.
Live Activities finally arrive on macOS as well, giving you quick access to ongoing tasks, deliveries, sports scores, and other real-time information without constantly switching between apps.
Spotlight search has also become smarter and more capable. Long-time Mac users already treat Spotlight as the fastest way to do almost anything, and Tahoe makes it even more useful. The less time spent digging through folders and menus, the better.
One feature that deserves special mention is Clipboard History. It sounds incredibly boring until you need it. Then it instantly becomes one of your favourite additions. Being able to revisit previously copied items saves a surprising amount of time and frustration.
Of course, there is also the elephant in the room: Apple Intelligence.
Last year, Apple made some very ambitious promises about AI-powered Siri features. Most of those features never arrived, and the company spent the following months explaining why they weren’t ready. It wasn’t Apple’s finest moment.
As a result, Tahoe takes a noticeably quieter approach to artificial intelligence. Apple Intelligence is still present, but it no longer dominates every conversation about the operating system. Frankly, that might be for the best.
The real strength of macOS continues to be the ecosystem rather than any single AI feature.
My favourite example remains iPhone Mirroring. The ability to control your iPhone directly from your Mac still feels vaguely like witchcraft. Need a two-factor authentication code? Need to respond to a message? Need something from an app on your phone while that phone is buried somewhere in your house? iPhone Mirroring handles it all without forcing you to leave your desk.
Also, connectivity is future-proof. The MacBook Air’s N1 chip adds support for Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 6, giving it a sense of readiness for the next generation of wireless devices and networks.
And that’s ultimately why macOS Tahoe works. The new design is nice, the AI features are fine, but the real magic remains Apple’s ability to make all of its devices feel like parts of the same machine. Few companies do that better.
Score: 9/10
Battery
Quick take: Dependable all-day battery life means one less thing to worry about.
Battery life continues to be one of the MacBook Air’s greatest strengths, even if it no longer feels quite as magical as it did when Apple Silicon first arrived and collectively made Windows laptop manufacturers very nervous.
In our testing, which included web browsing, video streaming, and some light gaming with the display set to 75 percent brightness, the MacBook Air lasted 13 hours and 28 minutes on a single charge. That’s comfortably enough to get through a full workday without spending half your afternoon hunting for a power socket.
More importantly, the battery life feels dependable. I never found myself nervously checking the battery percentage every hour or lowering screen brightness like a survivalist rationing supplies after the apocalypse. The MacBook Air simply gets on with the job.
And if you do happen to run low, charging is refreshingly straightforward. Apple’s MagSafe connector remains one of the best charging solutions in the business, snapping into place with satisfying ease while also protecting your laptop from an accidental cable yank. Alternatively, you can charge through USB-C if that’s more convenient.
With a charger nearby, whether it’s MagSafe or USB-C, stretching the MacBook Air through an entire day of work is remarkably easy.
In short, battery life isn’t a headline-grabbing feature on the M5 Air. It’s something arguably more valuable: one less thing to worry about.
Score: 9/10
Performance
Quick take: The M5 chip makes an already fast laptop feel even faster.
The new MacBook Air 13 with Apple’s M5 chip feels like Apple is perfecting a formula it already perfected years ago. The base model sounds humble enough on paper (10-core CPU, 8-core GPU, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSD), but in day-to-day use, I rarely felt like I was using an “entry-level” machine. Even in my early testing, the laptop handled heavier workloads far better than I would have expected from something so thin and light.
My unit had a 10-core CPU with an 8-core GPU, so GPU performance will obviously vary if you go for the upgraded 10-core GPU option. But the combination of the M5 chip, faster storage, and ample memory makes this MacBook Air feel really fast. This will be more than enough machine for most users and even quite a few professionals.
But what surprised me even more than the raw performance was the overall software experience on macOS Tahoe 2,6 which feels very polished. Apple’s latest OS is rich, well-organized, and deeply integrated into the wider Apple ecosystem. The more Apple devices you have,e the more this laptop starts to feel like the hub of everything.
Also, one gripe we had – Apple needs to ramp up its gaming portfolio, which currently consists of Cyberpunk 2077 and a couple of other games, fewer than the number of fingers you have on one hand.
Liquid Glass provides a more uniform visual style across Apple’s ecosystem, whether you’re moving from an iPhone 17 Pro to the MacBook Air. Fortunately, Apple has toned the effect down a bit on macOS. It still looks modern and fresh, without making the desktop look too shiny or distracting.
The desktop experience itself is still one of the biggest strengths of macOS. I still find features like Stacks very useful in keeping files organized, and I like how widgets can stay in monochrome to minimize distractions. It’s clean without trying too hard to be futuristic.
Where it gets really impressive is in the ecosystem integration. I loved being able to mirror my iPhone directly to the MacBook Air and get phone notifications on the desktop. Universal Control still feels almost unbelievably smooth. I could seamlessly switch my work control between an iPhone and the MacBook sitting side by side without even thinking about it. And for someone coming from Windows stable, this feels like a huge step-up.
Benchmarks and sustained load
Quick take: Benchmark gains are real, but everyday responsiveness is the bigger story.
Moving to benchmarks. The benchmark results indicate the base MacBook Air M5 is far more capable than its thin-and-light design would suggest. In the Blackmagic Disk Speed Test, the SSD managed to hit around 5.4 GB/s reads and 1.1 GB/s writes, which is fast enough for demanding workloads like 4K and even some 8K video editing.
On the other hand, the results on the AmorphousMemoryMark show a very high memory bandwidth, with read speeds over 124GB/s. In real-world use, this translates to zippy multitasking, faster app launches, and smooth handling of heavier creative workloads. Memory and storage performance on the M5 feels surprisingly near pro-level territory for a “Air” machine.
The MacBook Air M5’s benchmark numbers become far more impressive once you compare them with previous MacBook Air generations and modern integrated graphics solutions from the Windows side. In several GPU-focused 3DMark tests, the Air is now performing closer to entry-level gaming laptops than traditional ultraportables.
In Solar Bay, my unit scored 19,975 points at 1440 p.m. For perspective, verified online results show the MacBook Air M4 with a 10-core GPU averaging around 15,570 points in the same test. That means the M5 Air is delivering roughly a 28 percent jump in ray-tracing performance generation over generation. Even more interestingly, AMD’s Radeon 780M integrated graphics – one of the strongest Windows iGPU solutions right now – scores around 11,490 points in Solar Bay, putting the M5 comfortably ahead.
The same trend continues in Steel Nomad Light. My MacBook Air M5 scored 4,462 points, while the M4 GPU averages roughly 4,097 points online. That is not an earth-shattering jump, but it does show Apple steadily widening the gap between the Air and most integrated Windows graphics solutions. The Radeon 780M, for example, averages around 2,662 points in the same benchmark, which means the M5 Air is roughly 67 percent faster here.
The heavier Steel Nomad benchmark is where things become more realistic. My system scored 932 points, while Notebookcheck’s Apple M5 GPU database shows averages closer to 1,098 points. That suggests my 8-core GPU configuration is performing slightly below higher-end M5 variants, but still within the expected range for a fanless machine. By comparison, an M5 MacBook Pro with the 10-core GPU has posted scores around 1,138 points. So while the Air is clearly slower than actively cooled Pro models, the difference is smaller than you might expect.
Wild Life Extreme may be the most impressive result overall. My MacBook Air M5 scored 9,974 points at 4K resolution while running on battery power. Online M4 GPU averages sit around 9,591 points, while some optimized M5 systems reportedly cross 11,000 points. That puts the Air significantly ahead of older Apple Silicon chips like the M2 Pro, which typically scores around 10,955 points despite using a much larger and actively cooled laptop chassis.
The Geekbench 6 results show just how powerful Apple’s M5 chip has become for a thin-and-light laptop. My MacBook Air M5 scored 4,171 in single-core and 16,325 in multi-core CPU performance, putting it well ahead of most ultraportable Windows laptops and even ahead of several older MacBook Pro models. For perspective, the M4 MacBook Air typically scores around 3,800 single-core and 15,000 multi-core, meaning the M5 delivers a noticeable generational jump. GPU performance also looks strong, with an OpenCL score of 40,488. That places the Air comfortably above AMD’s Radeon 780M integrated graphics and close to entry-level discrete GPU territory in some creative workloads.
The benchmark results paint a clear picture: the MacBook Air M5 is no longer just a great ultraportable. It is becoming a genuinely capable performance machine. Apple’s new M5 chip delivers noticeable gains across both CPU and GPU workloads, with the biggest improvements appearing in graphics-focused tests.
In Geekbench 6, the M5 scored 4,171 in single-core and 16,325 in multi-core performance, extending Apple’s lead over competing ultraportable chips from Intel and Qualcomm. These gains may not look dramatic on paper, but they contribute to the Air’s exceptionally responsive everyday experience.
The GPU results are even more impressive. In Solar Bay, the M5’s 8-core GPU scored 19,975 points, roughly 28 percent ahead of the M4 and significantly faster than AMD’s Radeon 780M integrated graphics. Similar trends appear in Steel Nomad Light and Wild Life Extreme, where Apple’s fanless laptop continues to close the gap with entry-level gaming hardware.
What’s most remarkable is that these results come from a silent, fanless machine. The MacBook Air M5 may not replace a gaming laptop or MacBook Pro, but it comfortably delivers some of the strongest performance currently available in the ultraportable category.
No, the MacBook Air M5 is still not competing with RTX 4060 or RTX 4070 gaming laptops. But compared to integrated GPUs like Radeon 780M, older Apple Silicon machines, and even the previous-generation M4 Air, these numbers show Apple’s fanless ultraportable has become a genuinely capable GPU machine for creative work, GPU acceleration, and lighter gaming workloads.
Score: 9/10
Final verdict
The MacBook Air M5 is a slightly frustrating product to review because there isn’t much left for Apple to improve.
The design is largely unchanged, the display remains excellent rather than revolutionary, the keyboard and trackpad continue to lead the industry, and the battery life is comfortably good enough to get through a full day. Even macOS Tahoe, despite its flashy Liquid Glass makeover, feels more like a refinement than a reinvention.
And yet, none of that feels like a criticism.
What Apple has created with the MacBook Air M5 is arguably the most complete mainstream laptop you can buy today. It is thin, light, silent, powerful, exceptionally well-built, and backed by one of the best software ecosystems in the industry. It handles everyday productivity with ease, powers through creative workloads without complaint, and delivers performance levels that would have been considered absurd for a fanless laptop just a few years ago.
The most impressive thing about the M5 MacBook Air isn’t how fast it is. It’s how little you think about its performance. Everything happens instantly. Apps launch without hesitation, multitasking feels effortless, and the laptop never gives you a reason to question whether it can handle the next task.
Sure, I would love an OLED display. I’d happily take an extra USB-C port. And yes, I still dislike the notch.
But those complaints feel minor when viewed against everything else Apple gets right.
The MacBook Air M5 isn’t exciting because it changes everything. It’s impressive because it proves Apple already figured out the formula years ago and continues to refine it.
For most people, this is not just the best MacBook to buy. It’s the best laptop, full stop.
Should you buy it?
Yes. For most people, the answer is remarkably simple: buy the MacBook Air M5 and stop overthinking it.
If you’re upgrading from an Intel MacBook, an M1 MacBook Air, or an ageing Windows laptop, the improvement will be immediately noticeable. You’ll get exceptional battery life, near-instant responsiveness, a fantastic keyboard and trackpad, excellent build quality, and a level of polish that very few Windows laptops can consistently match.
It’s also powerful enough that most buyers won’t come close to finding its limits. Whether you’re a student, office worker, content creator, programmer, or someone who simply wants a premium laptop that lasts for years, the M5 Air has more than enough performance in reserve.
The only people who should think twice are existing M3 or M4 MacBook Air owners. The M5 is faster, but not dramatically so. If your current Air is doing everything you need, upgrading purely for benchmark gains makes very little sense.
Similarly, professional video editors, 3D artists, and users running sustained heavy workloads may still be better served by a MacBook Pro with active cooling and a more powerful GPU configuration.
Everyone else can safely ignore benchmark charts and spec-sheet debates.
The base 13-inch MacBook Air M5 with 16GB RAM and 512GB storage hits a sweet spot that feels unusually difficult to fault. It offers enough performance to satisfy enthusiasts, enough simplicity to please casual users, and enough longevity to remain relevant for years.
In a market full of laptops that excel in one area while compromising somewhere else, the MacBook Air M5 stands out because it compromises remarkably little.
Buy it, use it, and spend the next five years worrying about something more important than laptop performance.
Alternatives you can try
If you’re considering alternatives to the MacBook Air M5, there are a few standout options depending on what matters most to you.
The 15-inch MacBook Air M5 is the obvious alternative within Apple’s own lineup. It delivers the same excellent performance, battery life, and fanless design as the 13-inch model, but with a larger display and improved speaker system. For users who spend long hours working on documents, spreadsheets, or creative projects, the extra screen space can be well worth the added cost.
The Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 takes a different approach, focusing on AI-powered features, a premium design, and impressive battery life. Its high-quality display and comfortable keyboard make it one of the best Windows laptops available, although ARM app compatibility can still be a consideration for some users.
Meanwhile, the LG Gram remains a compelling choice for anyone who prioritises portability. Despite offering larger display options, it stays remarkably lightweight and includes a generous selection of ports. Battery life is excellent, and its ultra-light design makes it particularly appealing for frequent travellers.
What makes the MacBook Air M5 stand out is its balance. It may not have the largest display or the most ports, but few laptops combine performance, battery life, build quality, silent operation, and ecosystem integration as successfully. It doesn’t dominate every category – it simply gets almost everything right.
How we tested it
I used the MacBook Air M5 as my primary laptop for over two weeks, relying on it exactly as most buyers would. During that time, it handled everything from writing and research to photo editing, media consumption, video calls, and the endless browser tabs that somehow become part of every workday.
The laptop travelled with me between home, café,s and workspaces, spending time both plugged in and running exclusively on battery power. Testing wasn’t limited to synthetic benchmarks or controlled workloads. Instead, I focused on understanding how the MacBook Air performs in real-world conditions where responsiveness, reliability, and battery life matter more than benchmark scores.
Daily usage included multitasking across Safari, Apple Music, productivity apps, messaging platforms, and cloud-based tools. I also spent time watching videos, testing the speakers, participating in video calls, and evaluating the overall macOS Tahoe experience.
The goal was simple: to find out whether the MacBook Air M5 remains the laptop most people should buy. Rather than treating it as a test device, I actually purchased it as my everyday computer and judged it on how well it disappeared into daily life while getting work done.