Apple has released the 2026 16-inch MacBook Pro equipped with M5 Pro and M5 Max processors, emphasizing improvements in GPU performance for creative and AI tasks. Reviews highlight the device's excellent display and battery life rating of up to 24 hours, though it remains heavy and can run hot under load. The design stays consistent with previous models, focusing upgrades on internal components like Wi-Fi 7 support.
The 2026 16-inch MacBook Pro maintains the same physical design as its predecessors, regardless of whether configured with the M5 Pro or M5 Max chip. This continuity means purchasing decisions hinge on performance requirements rather than aesthetics. Reviews note a significant advancement in GPU capabilities, with options for 20, 32, or 40 cores. Doubling the GPU cores from 20 to 40 can yield up to a 1.7x performance boost, with typical improvements ranging from 1.2x to 1.8x in areas like generative imaging, gaming, and 3D rendering.
Both M5 Pro and M5 Max processors feature 18 CPU cores, including the same balance of "super" cores—previously termed "performance" cores—and a 16-core Neural Engine consistent across the M5 lineup. This uniformity ensures similar processing for general computing tasks, such as writing support, basic image editing, and videoconferencing, irrespective of memory configuration. However, graphics-intensive workloads benefit more from the Max variant, and shared memory between CPU and GPU means higher demands in video, photo, or AI generation necessitate more RAM. The base M5 Pro model starts at $2,699 with 1TB storage and 24GB RAM, though prices have risen due to component costs; upgrading from 64GB to 128GB RAM adds $800.
The display remains a standout, with excellent quality and an optional nano-texture coating recommended for bright environments to reduce glare. ProMotion enables adaptive refresh rates up to 120Hz, but manual setting to 120Hz is unavailable, and Adobe RGB support is absent. Battery life is rated for up to 24 hours of video streaming, surpassing the previous generation's 22 hours, aided by the new N1 networking chip and Wi-Fi 7 for improved stability on 6GHz channels.
Drawbacks include the device's weight, tendency to get loud and hot during heavy use, and a notable performance drop in low-power mode. It may represent the final iteration before potential shifts to OLED or touchscreen displays, though the current panel excels in P3 color gamut and brightness.