Skip to main content

Apple MacBook Air M4 review: a little more for a little less

Small improvements and a price reduction go a long way for the MacBook Air and Macs as a whole.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

257607_M4_MacBook_Air_ADiBenedetto_0021
257607_M4_MacBook_Air_ADiBenedetto_0021
The best laptop for most people is slightly better — and slightly bluer.
| Photo by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge
Antonio G. Di Benedetto
Antonio G. Di Benedetto is a reviewer covering laptops and the occasional gadget. He spent over 15 years in the photography industry before joining The Verge as a deals writer in 2021.

Apple rarely offers you more for less, especially in its most popular products with the broadest appeal. It has perfected the measured, iterative year-over-year product cycle. But for the 13- and 15-inch M4 MacBook Airs, Apple has put new chips in its established design while shoring up the device’s biggest flaws and dropping the price by $100.

The MacBook Air is an even better value than before, even against increased tariffs, further cementing it as the no-brainer, no-fuss recommendation for most people who need a basic laptop for around $1,000. And it anchors the MacBook lineup with a much clearer upgrade path for those with higher demands.

9

Verge Score

$999

The Good

  • Easily lasts a full day on battery
  • Excellent choice for most people’s everyday needs
  • Nails the basics in a thin-and-light while feeling like a nice place to be

The Bad

  • Still starts with just 256GB of storage
  • Still has limited ports
  • Still prone to throttling under heavy creative tasks

9

Verge Score

$1199

The Good

  • Easily lasts a full day on battery
  • Excellent choice for most people’s everyday needs
  • Nails the basics in a thin-and-light while feeling like a nice place to be
  • Louder speakers over its smaller counterpart

The Bad

  • Still starts with just 256GB of storage
  • Still has limited ports
  • Still prone to throttling under heavy creative tasks

Now starting at $999 once again, the 13-inch M4 MacBook Air comes with a 10-core CPU and 8-core GPU, 16GB of unified memory, and 256GB SSD. The 15-inch M4 starts at $1,199 with a 10-core CPU / 10-core GPU and similar 16GB / 256GB base configuration. Our review samples from Apple include the base $999 13-inch and a stepped-up $1,399 15-inch, which has a 512GB SSD, offering twice the storage and faster read / write speeds. The Air pair may start at $999, but I strongly suggest spending the extra $200 for the extra GPU cores and expanded storage. The roomier SSD and a little more future-proofing are still worth it if you can swing it.

Component report card:

  • Screen: B
  • Webcam: A
  • Mic: B
  • Keyboard: B
  • Touchpad: A
  • Port selection: C
  • Speakers: B
  • Number of ugly stickers to remove: 0

Much of what you see, feel, and hear on the new M4 MacBook Airs has been around since the M2 generation’s redesign in 2022. You’d be hard-pressed to tell the M2, M3, and new M4 models apart if not for nuances like a specific color option or how many external monitors are plugged in. That’s totally fine, if a little unexciting, since the Airs have been all-around fantastic for years now.

The new Airs offer a new sky blue color, a Thunderbolt 4 upgrade for the two ports, the Center Stage webcam from the MacBook Pro, and support for a proper triple-display setup by keeping their lids open while connected to two external monitors. You might think I’ve lost my marbles if I rattled off that list of changes with any semblance of excitement, but factoring in the price cut turns this otherwise humdrum update into a formidable refinement.

The color is nice, but it’s another example of Apple not being bold enough in its hues. It’s pleasant-looking (if a bit boring and inoffensive) but often dulls to looking like any old silver MacBook in warm-toned light. If Apple’s dying breed of desktop computers can get some lively saturation (on their rear, at least), then I think it’s time for the metallic equivalent of bondi blue on MacBooks.

The sky blue color of these MacBooks is quite subtle in most light.
And in some light, it practically disappears.

The Center Stage webcam offers a sharp image that works well in most lighting conditions, including low light and strong backlighting like a bright window. Compared to the M3 Air, it shows a little more detail in hair and is less prone to flares and ghosting from a strong light source. The 12-megapixel webcam sensor has a wider field of view and follows you so you stay in frame during video calls — or, if you’re picky, allows you to manually choose your composition. Desk View remains a shrug-your-shoulders “better than nothing” tool for sharing a book or what’s on your desk, though it’s still quite distorted and awkward-looking.

The M4 Air’s most “pro” new feature is its support for two external monitors in tandem with the built-in display. (Apple has incrementally improved this functionality over the last couple of years, allowing one external monitor on the M1 and M2 generations, and then two with the lid closed on the M3.) The M4 Air’s port selection only offers a MagSafe charging connector and two Thunderbolt 4 / USB-C ports, so you’ll need a USB-C hub or a monitor with built-in ports to allow more I/O while using three displays. Even if the average MacBook Air user may not have or need this kind of setup, it’s nice to see fewer limitations for those seeking lots of extra screen real estate in their work-from-home and office setups. And it’s one less reason to be forced into a MacBook Pro purchase.

System

MacBook Air 13-inch M4 / 10C / 8C / 16GB / 256GB

MacBook Air 15-inch M4 / 10C / 10C / 16GB / 512GB

MacBook Air 13-inch M3 / 8C / 10C / 16GB / 512GB

MacBook Air 15-inch M3 / 8C / 10C / 16GB / 512GB

MacBook Pro 14-inch M4 / 10C / 10C / 16GB / 1TB

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7th Edition Snapdragon X1P64100 / 10C / 16GB / 256GB

Cinebench 2024 Multi7368045676251003808
Cinebench 2024 Single171172141141172108
Geekbench 6 CPU Single377537903135312438262446
Geekbench 6 CPU Multi148991483112091120561499013190
Geekbench 6 GPU (OpenCL)307013591431741Not tested38098Not tested
Geekbench 6 GPU (Metal)4866555368474224626658059Not tested
PugetBench for Premiere Pro461247743860Not tested4839Not tested
PugetBench for Photoshop101631027585509349105555600
AmorphousDiskMark sustained SSD reads (MB/s)2910.043465.323443.63504.132533663.1
AmorphousDiskMark sustained SSD writes (MB/s)2115.573626.233326.23190.933932478.44
Blender classroom test69 seconds66 seconds128 seconds129 seconds65 seconds869 seconds
Shadow of the Tomb Raider (1920 x 1200, highest)30fps33fps25fps27fps38fpsNot tested

The new MacBook Air now uses a similar M4 chip as the base 14-inch MacBook Pro and has some solid performance gains over the M3. The M4 scored over 20 percent higher marks than the M3 in single-core and multi-core CPU performance (Geekbench and Cinebench). As for GPU performance, the base-model 13-inch M4 with eight GPU cores slightly edged out the M3 with two fewer cores. In a more apples-to-apples comparison of the 15-inch M4 versus the 15-inch M3 (both with 10-core GPUs), the M4 scored about 20 percent higher. The most marked improvement of the M4 Air was in the Blender classroom test, which it finished nearly twice as fast as the M3, showing even the M4’s 8-core GPU is more capable for short bursts of light 3D rendering work.

In real-world everyday use, the M4 Air doesn’t feel wholly different from the M3: everything is still fast while working and multitasking in documents and across various productivity apps. You can dabble in creative apps like Adobe Photoshop and Lightroom Classic, but at some point while doing that kind of work, the fanless MacBook Air will eventually throttle to prevent overheating, and those progress bars start hanging longer than the initially estimated time remaining.

Choose the size that works for you. There’s no wrong answer.
Choose the size that works for you. There’s no wrong answer.

If your work involves dipping into those kinds of workflows only once in a while, you’re likely just fine with a MacBook Air. But stepping up to a $1,599 14-inch Macbook Pro gives you the room to thrive, more ports, an SD card slot, a better screen, and even better speakers. What was a murky, confusing delineation between the two MacBook lines last year is now much clearer, with the 14-inch Pro’s improvements — including a third USB-C port — and the lower price of the Airs.

The MacBook Air continues to nail the fundamentals at a fairly affordable price. It still has exceptional battery life that lasts all day (not just squeaking through a workday but confidently getting through your whole day). It has a great keyboard, even though I prefer deeper key travel, and a solid IPS display that’s bright enough at 500 nits for outdoor use. Its haptic trackpad is the best around. The speakers on both sizes are very good, with the two extra speakers on the 15-inch allowing it to get quite loud without sounding distorted or tinny. It even has good mics and an improved webcam.

You can easily spend $2,000 or more on various Windows laptops that still don’t nail all those basics, and the Airs hammer each home to make it an exceptional package that’s now a little cheaper. High-demanding gaming and creative tasks aside, the M4 MacBook Airs are the ultimate no-fuss laptops for anyone who wants to buy an everyday computer and not think much of it for another five years or more.

The webcam on the M3 and M2 Airs were good, but this one’s even better.
Like other current MacBooks, a color-matched MagSafe plug is included.
On the left is still a MagSafe 3 charging port, and now the two USB-C ports are Thunderbolt 4.
On the right for both sizes is a lone 3.5mm audio jack.

The one glaring, lackluster spec of the base-model M4 Airs is its starting 256GB drive. While I think it’s best to pay the Apple tax and outfit your Air with 512GB of storage, at least the days of frustratingly slower read / write speeds in the 256GB base config are thankfully long gone. The 512GB SSD in the M4 Air is still a little faster than the 256GB, as shown in our benchmark table above, but it’s on par with the same config in last year’s M3 model.

But this year, the base configuration gets you 16GB of RAM, unlike last year, when it was still a paltry 8GB. This change was already set in motion in the fall, midcycle for the M3 model, when Apple made 16GB standard across all base Macs for the sake of Apple Intelligence. Apple Intelligence remains mostly inconsequential, especially on Macs, but RAM is not.

The new M4 MacBook Airs don’t do anything groundbreaking or exciting, but sometimes being boring and consistent is a good thing. There’s nothing wrong with an iterative update.

Apple MacBook Air M4 13 / 15 specs (as reviewed)

  • Display (13-inch): 13.6-inch (2560 x 1664) 60Hz IPS, 500 nits
  • Display (15-inch): 15.3-inch (2880 x 1864) 60Hz IPS, 500 nits
  • Processor (13-inch): Apple M4 (10-core CPU / 8-core GPU)
  • Processor (15-inch): Apple M4 (10-core CPU / 10-core GPU)
  • Unified memory: 16GB
  • Storage (13-inch): 256GB SSD
  • Storage (15-inch): 512GB SSD
  • Webcam: 12-megapixel Center Stage camera with Desk View
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3
  • Ports: 2x USB 4 (Type-C) / Thunderbolt 4, MagSafe 3 charging, 3.5mm combo audio jack
  • Weight (13-inch): 2.7 pounds
  • Weight (15-inch): 3.3 pounds
  • Dimensions (13-inch): 11.97 x 8.46 x 0.44 inches
  • Dimensions (15-inch): 13.4 x 9.35 x 0.45 inches
  • Battery (13-inch): 53.8Wh
  • Battery (15-inch): 66.5Wh
  • Price (13-inch): $999
  • Price (15-inch): $1,399

Photography by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge