Apple MacBook Pro 14.2" M5 Max Silver 2026
With an 18-core M5 Max, 40-core GPU, 64GB unified RAM, and up to 24-hour battery life, this 1.6kg 14" MacBook Pro delivers top-tier CPU/GPU performance and all-day endurance. The 1600-nit Liquid Retina XDR display with nano-texture glass reduces glare for extended studio sessions, while Thunderbolt 5 and Wi-Fi 7 ensure fast external connectivity. Best for 3D VFX artists, AI developers training on-device transformer models, and film composers exporting large projects.
Over deze Laptop
Now with the powerful M5 Max chip, the 14" MacBook Pro delivers advanced single- and multithreaded CPU performance and faster unified memory. Designed for 3D VFX artists, AI developers, and film composers, the M5 Max 18-Core chip features a next-generation 40-Core GPU with a Neural Accelerator in each core, which helps speed up AI tasks like LLM prompt processing and on-device transformer model training. The M5 Max chip also brings up to 2x faster SSD performance than the previous generation for tasks that include importing RAW image files or exporting videos. Additionally, it offers optimal battery life of up to 24 hours, so you can take your pro workflows anywhere.
- Apple M5 Max 18-Core Chip
- 64GB Unified RAM | 4TB SSD
- 14" 3024 x 1964 Liquid Retina XDR Screen
- 40-Core GPU | Neural Accelerators
The 30-Second Version
No laptop display comes close, and the storage is absurdly fast. Just don’t expect to game—this is a pure creator’s tool with a GPU that can’t keep up.
Overview
The MacBook Pro M5 Max is the ultimate unapologetically “creator-first” laptop. It’s got the best screen in any laptop we’ve tested, period. Mini-LED brightness hits 1600 nits for HDR, colors cover 100% DCI-P3, and the 120Hz refresh makes everything feel fluid. Combined with 4TB of storage that screams past 99% of other laptops and 64GB of unified memory, this machine is built to handle 8K video timelines, massive AI model prototyping, and compiling giant codebases without a hiccup. But here’s the thing—it’s not for everyone. The integrated 40-core GPU lands in the 18th percentile against all laptops, which means 3D rendering and gaming are a chore compared to even mid-range Windows machines with a dedicated RTX card. Apple’s Neural Accelerators and media engines are incredible for photo, video, and LLM inference. Just don’t confuse this with a gaming rig or a standard workstation.
Performance
The screen and storage are the stars that genuinely surprised us. That 14.2-inch Liquid Retina XDR panel is head and shoulders above anything you’ll find on a Windows laptop, and the 4TB SSD is so fast that exporting 100GB of RAW footage feels like copying a text file. On the flip side, the GPU performance is a quiet letdown. Apple’s touting heavy AI and video workloads, but if you throw a complex Blender scene or a modern AAA game at it, you’ll watch the frame rate stumble hard. It’s not that the M5 Max is slow—it’s that the competition has moved to discrete GPUs that this chip simply can’t match in raw raster performance.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- The best display on any laptop—mini-LED, 1600 nits, 100% DCI-P3 99th
- Blazing 4TB SSD and 64GB RAM that leave most workstations in the dust 99th
- All-day battery (up to 24 hours) and dead-silent cooling 96th
- Thunderbolt 5, Wi-Fi 7, and SDXC slot cover nearly every pro need 96th
Cons
- Integrated GPU is a bottleneck—gaming and 3D rendering are miserable 19th
- Prices swing wildly from $4,899 to $6,863; you have to hunt for the deal
- No upgradability—RAM and storage are soldered forever
- Heavy at 1.60kg for a 14-inch machine; not exactly an ultrabook
Specifications
Full Specifications
Processor
| CPU | Apple M5 |
| Cores | 18 |
Graphics
| GPU | Apple (40-Core) |
Memory & Storage
| RAM | 64 GB |
| RAM Generation | LPDDR5 |
| Storage | 4 TB |
| Storage Type | NVMe SSD |
Display
| Size | 14.2" |
| Resolution | 3024 |
| Panel | Mini-LED |
| Refresh Rate | 120 Hz |
| Brightness | 1600 nits |
| Color Gamut | 100% DCI-P3 |
Connectivity
| USB-C Ports | 3 |
| USB Ports | 0 |
| Thunderbolt | Thunderbolt 5 |
| HDMI | HDMI |
| Wi-Fi | Wi-Fi 7 |
| Bluetooth | Bluetooth 6.0 |
Physical
| Weight | 1.6 kg / 3.5 lbs |
| Battery | 72 Wh |
| OS | macOS |
Value & Pricing
At $4,899 from the cheapest vendor, this is a tough value proposition unless your workflows lean hard on macOS and that screen. Spending nearly two grand more at another store is just silly—shop around and pocket the difference. For a video editor who lives in Final Cut Pro or an AI dev needing the 16-core Neural Engine, it’s a specialized tool that justifies its price. But for anyone else, you’re paying a premium for Apple’s ecosystem and a gorgeous display while getting steamrolled by Windows laptops that pack a lot more GPU for the same money.
Price History
vs Competition
The most obvious rivals are the ASUS ROG Flow GZ302 and the Lenovo P16 Gen 3. The ASUS is lighter, transforms into a tablet, and packs a dedicated RTX 4060 that will lap the M5 Max in gaming and 3D rendering. However, its OLED panel can’t touch the MacBook’s sustained brightness and color accuracy. The Lenovo P16 Gen 3 goes the other direction—it’s a thick, heavy workstation with an RTX 5000 Ada GPU that demolishes this Mac in raw compute, plus you can swap RAM and storage. But you’ll sacrifice the incredible screen, battery life, and Apple’s seamless integration. If your software stack is macOS-native, the MacBook wins. If you need CUDA or game on the side, look to the Windows alternatives.
| Spec | Apple MacBook Pro 14.2" M5 Max | ASUS ROG Flow GZ302EA-XS99 | Lenovo Legion Pro Series Legion Pro 7i Gen 10 | MSI Prestige PRE13EVOA2088 | Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro NP940XHA-KG3US | Dell Premium LDA14250-7667SLV-PUS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CPU | Apple M5 | AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 | Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX | Intel Core Ultra 7 258V | Intel Core Ultra 7 256V | Intel Core Ultra 7 255H |
| RAM (GB) | 64 | 128 | 32 | 32 | 32 | 32 |
| Storage (GB) | 4096 | 1024 | 1024 | 1000 | 1000 | 1000 |
| Screen | 14.2" 3024x1964 | 13.4" 2560x1600 | 16" 2560x1600 | 13.3" 2880x1800 | 14" 2880x1800 | 14.5" 3200x2000 |
| GPU | Apple (40-Core) | AMD Radeon | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti Laptop GPU | Intel Arc | Intel Arc | Intel Arc |
| OS | macOS | Windows 11 Pro | Windows 11 Home | Windows 11 Home | Windows 11 Home | Windows 11 Home |
| Weight (kg) | 1.6 | 1.2 | 2.7 | 1 | 1.2 | 1.7 |
| Battery (Wh) | 72 | 70 | 99 | - | 15 | 62 |
| Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare |
| Product | Cpu | Gpu | Ram | Port | Screen | Compact | Storage | Reliability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apple MacBook Pro 14.2" M5 Max | 81.4 | 18.5 | 96.4 | 73 | 98.9 | 66.7 | 98.6 | 96 |
| ASUS ROG Flow GZ302EA-XS99 Compare | 95.1 | 80.3 | 99.9 | 77.5 | 89.2 | 92.7 | 81.2 | 57.9 |
| Lenovo Legion Pro Series Legion Pro 7i Gen 10 Compare | 96.5 | 90 | 90.2 | 98.1 | 94.3 | 8.5 | 81.2 | 78.2 |
| MSI Prestige PRE13EVOA2088 Compare | 63.1 | 64.2 | 80.8 | 83.4 | 89.9 | 95.3 | 73.3 | 57.9 |
| Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro NP940XHA-KG3US Compare | 66.4 | 64.2 | 80.8 | 66.8 | 93.2 | 85 | 73.3 | 78.2 |
| Dell Premium LDA14250-7667SLV-PUS Compare | 84.6 | 64.2 | 90.2 | 73 | 95.9 | 54.8 | 63.7 | 31.6 |
Common Questions
Q: Can I play AAA games on the M5 Max MacBook Pro?
Honestly, no. The 40-core GPU scores in the bottom fifth of all laptops we test, so you’ll get playable frame rates only at low settings and reduced resolutions. If gaming matters at all, pick up an ASUS ROG Flow instead.
Q: Is 64GB of unified RAM enough for running large language models locally?
For most transformer models up to 30 billion parameters, yes—64GB is plenty and the Neural Accelerators help with token speed. If you’re experimenting with huge 70B+ models, you’ll want the 128GB upgrade, but that’s only available on the 16-inch M5 Max configuration.
Q: How does the M5 Max compare to the M4 Max for video editing?
The M5 Max’s SSDs are up to 2x faster, which makes scrubbing 8K ProRes timelines noticeably snappier. CPU performance gets a solid bump too, but the real-world difference over the M4 Max is more about storage speed and AI-assisted rendering—not a night-and-day CPU leap.
Who Should Skip This
If your idea of a high-end laptop includes playing Cyberpunk 2077 at ultra settings or rendering complex 3D scenes in Blender all day, this machine is a poor fit. Go grab an ASUS ROG Flow or a Lenovo P16 Gen 3 with a dedicated RTX GPU instead. You’ll get far better GPU performance and save money in the process.
Verdict
Buy the MacBook Pro M5 Max if your life revolves around Final Cut, Logic Pro, or Apple’s developer ecosystem and you crave that unmatched display. It’s the best creative companion Apple has ever shipped. Everyone else—especially gamers and 3D artists—should skip it. The integrated GPU is a genuine weak spot, and a Windows machine with a proper RTX card will serve you better for the same or less money.