If you’ve been holding off on buying a new MacBook Pro because the next generation of Apple Silicon is just around the corner, you might want to reset your expectations.
A new report by Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman suggests Apple is making its biggest change yet to the Mac chip roadmap. Instead of releasing a full family of M6 processors like it has with every generation since the original M1, the company is reportedly planning to launch only the standard M6 chip first. The more powerful Pro and Max variants? They may not arrive until 2027, and they’ll reportedly skip the M6 branding altogether.
Apple’s roadmap is taking an expected detour
For years, Apple’s silicon strategy has been wonderfully predictable. A new generation would arrive with a standard chip, followed by Pro, Max, and sometimes Ultra variants powering the company’s higher-end Macs. That consistency may be about to disappear.
According to the report, Apple wants to fast-track an AI-focused chip architecture rather than spend time releasing the M6 Pro and M6 Max processors. The result could be an unusual gap in which entry-level Macs receive an M6 upgrade, while premium MacBook Pros, Mac Studios, and Mac minis continue to rely on the current M5 generation until the M7 lineup is ready. It’s a bold move, but one that reflects where the industry is headed. AI workloads are becoming just as important as raw CPU performance, and Apple appears determined to optimize its next flagship chips around that reality rather than simply delivering another annual refresh.
The wait could bring more than just faster performance
If the report is accurate, the M6 itself won’t be a minor update. It’s expected to feature significantly higher memory bandwidth, a redesigned GPU, an upgraded Neural Engine, and architectural improvements aimed squarely at AI tasks, video editing, and graphics-heavy workloads. The bigger leap, however, is reportedly reserved for the M7 family. Apple is said to be designing its next-generation Pro, Max, and Ultra chips with on-device AI as a primary focus. That could translate into faster local AI models, smoother creative workflows, and better multitasking without relying on cloud processing.
The downside is obvious — power users hoping for a new MacBook Pro powered by an M6 Pro or M6 Max may simply never get one. It’s worth remembering that none of this has been officially confirmed by Apple. But if the roadmap holds, the company is signaling something interesting: the race to build the smartest chips may now matter more than releasing the fastest ones every year. For Mac enthusiasts, that’s both exciting and a test of patience. The next big leap may be worth waiting for, but it sounds like you’ll be waiting a little longer than usual.