Skip to main content

The next MacBook Air could come with this surprising chip

At Apple’s Peek Performance event yesterday, the company detailed the next step in its Apple Silicon line-up with the beastly M1 Ultra chip. Yet in an unexpected move, the next MacBook Air, expected later this year, could use a decidedly more down-to-earth chip.

According to Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, who has a good reputation for accuracy, the upcoming MacBook Air will be outfitted with an M1 chip, rather than the M2 it has long been expected to carry.

Digital Trends

That’s a surprising revelation, particularly since it would mean the 2022 MacBook Air would use the same chip it launched with in 2020. It also contradicts reports from other sources regarding the device. For example, reporter Mark Gurman has said on a number of occasions that the next MacBook Air will have an M2 chip.

Recommended Videos

When Kuo mentioned the M1, it seems unlikely he was referring to the M1 Pro. While that chip would be more able to keep the MacBook Air up to speed in 2022 than the M1, it is aimed at pro users instead of the consumers served by the MacBook Air. It is also possible that the mention of the M1 was simply a typo by Kuo, although if so, it has not been corrected since publication.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Predictions for new MacBook Air in 2022:
1. Mass production in late 2Q22 or 3Q22
2. Processor: M1 chip
3. No mini-LED display
4. All-new form factor design
5. More color options

— 郭明錤 (Ming-Chi Kuo) (@mingchikuo) March 9, 2022

Kuo also made a few other predictions for the MacBook Air, including that it will offer more color options and a new design, lack the Mini-LED display of the MacBook Pro, and will enter mass production late in the second quarter or third quarter of 2022.

Those forecasts are more aligned with what we’ve seen elsewhere. For instance, both YouTuber Jon Prosser and Mark Gurman have indicated the MacBook Air will come with a new design that makes the product thinner and lighter while doing away with its classic tapered profile. Prosser also argued that it would come with new colors, much like those found on the 24-inch iMac.

Whatever chip the next MacBook Air ends up using, we should find out later in 2022. Mark Gurman believes Apple might save it for the holiday season, so we’ve still got a little while to wait.

Alex Blake
Alex Blake has been working with Digital Trends since 2019, where he spends most of his time writing about Mac computers…
Apple faces challenges with bringing OLED to the MacBook Air
The MacBook Air on a white table.

A report from Korean outlet The Elec suggests the OLED MacBook Air that Apple was allegedly planning to release in 2027 could face significant delays. While progress for the OLED MacBook Pro seems to be going smoothly, the price increase caused by the new display technology is a much bigger problem for the budget MacBook Air models.

One of the biggest selling points of the MacBook Air is its lower price, making it great for first-time Mac buyers, students, and anyone else who doesn't expressly need the power of a Pro. While price increases are a natural part of the tech industry, the slightly disappointing sales of the 2024 OLED iPad Pro suggest that a new display simply isn't enough of an incentive for consumers to justify a higher price tag.

Read 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