Apple 13-inch MacBook Air - Apple M5 chip with 10-core CPU and 8-core GPU - 16GB Memory - 512GB SSD - Starlight Review

The M5 MacBook Air refines a classic, but its high price and mediocre GPU make it a tough sell. We break down who this luxury ultraportable is actually for.

CPU M5
RAM 16 GB
Storage 512 GB
Screen 13.6" 2560x1664
GPU Apple M5 8-core
OS Mac OS
Weight 1.2 kg
Apple 13-inch MacBook Air - Apple M5 chip with 10-core CPU and 8-core GPU - 16GB Memory - 512GB SSD - Starlight laptop
74.4 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

The M5 MacBook Air is a luxury ultraportable with a weak GPU and a premium price. Buy it for the battery and the Apple logo, not for power. For everyone else, better options exist.

Overview

The new M5 MacBook Air is the laptop you buy when you want a Mac, not necessarily the best laptop. It's a fantastic refinement of a proven formula, but the headline here isn't a massive performance leap. It's Apple Intelligence, and whether you're willing to pay for a chip that's mostly about future AI features that aren't even fully here yet. The one thing to know? This is the ultimate 'it just works' machine for the Apple faithful, but the value gets shaky the moment you look outside the walled garden.

Performance

Our database shows the M5's CPU lands in the 78th percentile, which is solid but not a huge jump from the M3. It's fast, but you won't feel a dramatic difference in everyday tasks. The real surprise is the GPU, sitting in the 18th percentile. That confirms what we all suspected: this is not a machine for anything graphically intensive. Gaming is a non-starter, and even light video editing will feel its limits. The battery life, however, is the star, living up to the 'all-day' promise with ease.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 81
GPU 19
RAM 41.4
Ports 53.4
Screen 76.9
Portability 90.6
Storage 45.3
Reliability 94.5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Incredible battery life that actually lasts a full workday. 95th
  • The build quality and portability are top-tier; it feels premium and is a joy to carry. 91th
  • Apple Intelligence integration is seamless for those already in the ecosystem. 81th
  • The screen is beautiful for general use and media consumption. 77th

Cons

  • The GPU performance is weak, making it a poor choice for any creative work beyond photos. 19th
  • You're paying an 'Apple tax' for the brand and OS, especially at this configuration.
  • Only two Thunderbolt ports feels stingy in 2024.
  • The 512GB SSD feels cramped for a 'prosumer' machine at this price.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

Cores 10

Graphics

GPU Apple M5 8-core
Type integrated

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation Not provid
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type SSD

Display

Size 13.6"
Resolution 2560 (QHD)

Connectivity

Thunderbolt 2x Thunderbolt

Physical

Weight 1.2 kg / 2.7 lbs
OS Mac OS

Value & Pricing

At over a grand for this 16GB/512GB config, the value proposition is thin. You're buying into the Apple ecosystem and future AI promises, not raw specs. For the same money, Windows Copilot+ PCs offer more RAM, storage, and often a dedicated GPU. It's only 'worth it' if you live and breathe Apple's world.

Price History

New Refurbished
$700 $800 $900 $1,000 $1,100 $1,200 Mar 17Mar 28Apr 6Apr 13 $949

vs Competition

The most relevant competitor is the ASUS ProArt PX13. For similar money, you get double the RAM, double the storage, a stunning OLED touchscreen, and a dedicated RTX 4050 GPU. It runs circles around the Air for creative work. The other elephant in the room is Apple's own 14-inch MacBook Pro with the M4. If you need more power for pro apps, spending a bit more gets you a vastly better screen, more ports, and a huge GPU boost. The Air wins on portability and battery, but loses everywhere else.

Spec Apple 13-inch MacBook Air - Apple M5 chip with 10-core CPU and 8-core GPU - 16GB Memory - 512GB SSD - Starlight Apple MacBook Pro Apple 14" MacBook Pro (M4 Max, Space Black) ASUS ROG Flow ASUS ROG Flow - AMD Ryzen AI MAX+ 395 AMD Radeon Lenovo ThinkPad Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 7 16" UHD+ OLED Touchscreen MSI Creator MSI Creator M14 A13V A13VF-081US 14" 2.8K Laptop, HP ZBook HP 14" ZBook Ultra G1a Multi-Touch Mobile
CPU M5 Apple M4 Max AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 Intel Core Ultra 7 165H Intel Core i7 13620H AMD Ryzen AI Max+ Pro 395
RAM (GB) 16 36 128 64 32 128
Storage (GB) 512 1024 1024 2048 2048 2048
Screen 13.6" 2560x1664 14.2" 3024x1964 13.4" 2560x1600 16" 3840x2160 14" 2880x1800 14" 2880x1800
GPU Apple M5 8-core Apple M4 Max 32-core AMD Radeon 8060 NVIDIA RTX 2000 Ada Generation NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 AMD Radeon
OS Mac OS macOS Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Pro, English Windows 11 Home (MSI recommends Windows 11 Pro for business) Windows 11 Pro
Weight (kg) 1.2 1.6 1.2 1.8 1.6 2.5
Battery (Wh) - 72 70 90 - 74

Common Questions

Q: Is 16GB of RAM enough?

For this machine's intended use—web browsing, office apps, light photo editing—16GB is plenty. The unified memory architecture is efficient. You only need more if you're running virtual machines or keeping 50 Chrome tabs plus Photoshop open.

Q: Can it game?

No. The integrated GPU is in the 18th percentile. You'll be stuck playing older titles at low settings. If gaming is even a minor consideration, look at a Windows laptop with a dedicated GPU.

Q: Should I wait for more Apple Intelligence features?

If you're buying this specifically for AI, wait. The core features are trickling out slowly. The M5 chip is ready, but the software isn't all there yet. Buy it for what it does today, not what it might do tomorrow.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this if you edit video, work with 3D models, or want to play modern games. Also skip it if you need more than two ports without a dongle. In those cases, go get the ASUS ProArt PX13 for creative work or a Lenovo Legion for gaming. Even a base-model 14-inch MacBook Pro is a smarter buy for power users.

Verdict

We can only recommend this M5 MacBook Air to a specific person: someone deeply invested in the Apple ecosystem who needs extreme portability and battery life for writing, browsing, and light office work, and who is excited about Apple Intelligence. For students, business users, or anyone who does more than the basics, a base-model MacBook Pro or a high-spec Windows Copilot+ laptop offers significantly better performance and value for your dollar.