Apple iPad Air Apple 13" iPad Air (M3, 256GB, Wi-Fi + 5G, Blue) Review
The iPad Air with M3 packs serious power into a sleek tablet, but its high price and limited RAM make it a tough call against the iPad Pro and lightweight laptops.
Overview
So you're looking at the new 13-inch iPad Air with the M3 chip. It's a weird spot, honestly. You've got basically the same processor as the entry-level MacBook Air now living inside a tablet, and it's priced right up against the iPad Pro. This thing is for the person who wants a big, beautiful screen for drawing or marking up documents, needs the flexibility of cellular data on the go, but maybe doesn't need the absolute top-tier screen or speakers of the Pro. The blue color is slick, and at 635 grams, it's surprisingly light for a 13-inch slab.
Performance
The M3 chip is no joke. In benchmarks, the CPU lands in the 82nd percentile, which means it's faster than most tablets out there. For real work, that translates to buttery smooth multitasking. You can have a dozen Safari tabs open, a video playing in PiP, and be sketching in Procreate without a single stutter. The 8GB of RAM is the only real limit, and you'll feel it if you push too many heavy apps at once. The GPU, sitting at the 81st percentile, handles illustration and light video editing just fine. But if you're thinking about serious 3D work or console-level gaming, this isn't the tool for that.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- The 13-inch Liquid Retina display is stunning. At 600 nits and 264 pixels per inch, everything looks crisp and bright, perfect for reviewing designs or watching movies. 96th
- Having 5G cellular built-in is a game-changer for true mobility. You're not tied to Wi-Fi, which is huge for business users or artists working out in the field. 86th
- The M3 chip provides desktop-class power for a tablet. It makes complex tasks in apps like Affinity Designer or LumaFusion feel effortless. 82th
- Connectivity is top-notch, ranking in the 96th percentile with Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3. File transfers and accessory connections are fast and reliable. 81th
- It supports both the Apple Pencil and a Magic Keyboard, turning it from a tablet into a proper laptop replacement for many workflows.
Cons
- The battery life is just average, landing at the 50th percentile. You'll need to charge it every day with moderate use, and heavy workloads will drain it faster.
- Only 8GB of RAM feels limiting for a prosumer device at this price, especially when the base MacBook Air has 8GB and costs less.
- 256GB of storage is okay, but it's in the 64th percentile. Creative pros will fill that up quickly with projects and need to rely on cloud storage or external drives.
- It lacks the ProMotion 120Hz display of the iPad Pro. For drawing and scrolling, that smoother motion is noticeably absent.
- At a starting price around $1,000, it's stepping into iPad Pro and lightweight laptop territory, making the value proposition a tough sell.
Specifications
Full Specifications
Processor
| CPU | Apple M3 |
| Cores | 8 |
| GPU | Apple (9-Core) |
Memory & Storage
| RAM | 8 GB |
| Storage | 256 GB |
| Expandable | No |
Display
| Size | 13" |
| Resolution | 2732 |
| Panel | IPS |
| Brightness | 600 nits |
Connectivity
| Wi-Fi | WiFi 6E |
| Bluetooth | Bluetooth 5.3 |
| Cellular | Yes |
Features
| Stylus Support | Yes |
Physical
| Weight | 0.6 kg / 1.4 lbs |
| OS | iPadOS |
Value & Pricing
Here's the rub: this iPad Air starts around $999, maybe a bit more for the cellular model. That's a lot of money. For that price, you're getting an incredible screen and the latest M3 chip, but you're making compromises on RAM, storage, and the high-refresh-rate display. You're paying a premium for the Apple ecosystem and that sleek, portable form factor. If you compare it to a base model 13-inch MacBook Air with an M3 (also 8GB/256GB), the laptop is often cheaper and runs a full desktop OS. The value is really in the tablet-first experience.
vs Competition
The most direct competitor is the 13-inch iPad Pro with the M4 chip. The Pro gives you a better 120Hz screen, more base storage, and slightly better speakers, but it costs significantly more. If the ultimate tablet experience is your goal, the Pro is still king. Then there's the Microsoft Surface Pro 11. It runs full Windows, has more ports, and can handle true desktop software like full Photoshop. But its battery life and app optimization for touch aren't as good as the iPad's. The Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra is another alternative with a massive, beautiful AMOLED screen and great multitasking, but its software and accessory ecosystem isn't as polished. The iPad Air sits in the middle: more power and a better screen than the Surface for pure tablet stuff, but not as 'pro' as the iPad Pro.
Verdict
If you're an artist or designer who needs a large, precise canvas and loves the Apple Pencil experience, this iPad Air is a fantastic choice. The M3 has more than enough power, and the cellular option means you can work anywhere. For a business user who lives in email, video calls, and document markups, it's a incredibly portable and capable machine, especially with a keyboard. But if you're just looking for a media consumption device or your main computer, think twice. The entertainment score is its weakest area, and the price is high for a tablet. You might be better served by a cheaper iPad or a MacBook Air.