Just like the M5 iPad Pro, there's nothing new about Apple's 14-inch M5 MacBook Pro from a design perspective.

The M5 MacBook Pro's screen showing Image Playground

Sticking with this theme, unlike the M5 iPad Pro, there aren't that many notable changes under the hood beyond the jump to the M5 chip. Still, there are a few changes, including higher memory bandwidth, faster SSD performance, and a 4TB storage option (for anyone who doesn't mind paying Apple's hefty storage tax).

However, the main draw is the jump to the M5 chip, so let's see how it compares to the M4 MacBook Pro.

It's worth noting that, unlike in previous years, the M5 Pro and M5 Max haven't dropped yet. The more powerful M5 series chips are expected to be revealed at some point in the next few months.

M5 MacBook Pro
Apple
Operating System
macOS 26 Tahoe
CPU
M5 10-Core CPU
GPU
M5 10-Core GPU
RAM
16GB, 24GB, 32GB
Storage
512GB, 1TB, 2TB, 4TB
Display (Size, Resolution)
14-inch, 3024 x 1964 pixel resolution

Colors
Space black, silver

The M5 chip is a tiny jump over even the M4

If you're using an M1 or M2 MacBook Pro, it might be worth the upgrade

The M5 MacBook Pro from a top down perspective on a table

The 14-inch M5 MacBook Pro configuration Apple sent me to test is the 10-core CPU/10-core GPU, 16GB, 1TB SSD version with a nano-texture display (which costs an extra $150, but I think it's worth it). This M5 MacBook Pro spec setup is the middle-of-the-road $1,800 USD ($2,400 CAD) option. While my experience with the laptop over the last few days has been extremely smooth, I ran several benchmarks, revealing how much more powerful the M5 chip is compared to the M4. Check out the benchmarks below:

M5 MacBook Pro (10-core CPU, 10-core GPU, 16GB RAM)

CPU Single-core

CPU Multi-core

GPU

Geekbench 6

4,245

16,532

48,793

Cinebench (2024)

199

1,156

5,755

M4 MacBook Pro (10-core CPU, 10-core GPU, 16GB RAM)

CPU Single-core

CPU Multi-core

GPU

Geekbench 6

3,833

15,128

38,285

Cinebench (2024)

129

1,003

3,999

M3 Max MacBook Pro (14-core CPU, 32-core GPU, 96GB RAM)

CPU Single-core

CPU Multi-core

GPU

Geekbench 6

2,868

18,785

82,439

Cinebench (2024)

121

1,063

9,792

One of my key questions was how the M5 MacBook Pro's benchmarks compare to the very beefy M3 Max MacBook Pro with 96GB RAM I've used for the last few years as my daily work laptop. While the M5 beats the M3 Max in single-core, the latter chip still has it beat in multi-core and GPU performance.

According to Apple, the M5's CPU is "20 percent faster" than the M4, and that's backed up by my own benchmarks tests in the chart above, though my M3 Max MacBook Pro still beats out the M5 in multi-core and GPU performance by a wide margin (this is to be expected given its 32 cores and ridiculous 96GB RAM). That said, both the M4 and M5 14-inch MacBook Pro beat the M3 Max easily in single-core performance.

The M5 MacBook Pro with its lid closed

While I didn't do tests myself, the base M3 hits 3,081 for single-core and 11,578 for multi-core on Geekbench 6 according to tests I found online, which means the new M5 is a substantial bump over Apple's 2023 chip.

So what are the other upgrades?

There isn't much

The M5 MacBook Pro sitting on a couch with a retro background.

Beyond the chip upgrade, there are a few other new features in this refresh. First off, the M5 MacBook Pro features 153GB/s of unified memory bandwidth, compared to last year's 120GB/s, marking a 30 percent improvement. This should make apps launch quicker and also help with on-device AI tasks like large language models (LLMs).

Along with more memory bandwidth, the M5 MacBook Pro also features a 2x faster SSD compared to the M4, and has increased the maximum size of the M5 MacBook's storage to 4TB.

The new 14-inch M5 MacBook Pro is aimed squarely at those still using an M1, M2, and maybe the base M3 14-inch MacBook Pro...

So what does all this mean? If you own the M4 or a higher-end M3 Pro or M3 Max MacBook Pro, there isn't enough of a power boost to justify an upgrade to the M5. The new 14-inch M5 MacBook Pro is aimed squarely at those still using the M1, M2, and maybe the base M3 14-inch MacBook Pro, or anyone still waiting to move over from a now-ancient Intel MacBook.

The M5 MacBook Pro is available now and starts at $1,800 USD ($2,400 CAD).