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March 24, 2026

Apple MacBook Pro 14-inch (M5 Max) review: the best just got even better



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What more is there to say about the MacBook Pro at this point? Apple has been knocking it out of the orchard with its M5 generation, and if you’ve come here to find out if the 14in MacBook Pro with M5 Max processor is any good, then rest assured that it really, really is. It’s so thunderingly good that it has gone in straight at the top of many of the benchmark tests we use to keep track of which laptop is better than the rest, beating last year’s M4 chips by as much as 68%. If you’re looking for the best creative laptop in 2026 (or the best laptop for CAD, amongst other tasks) and have the cash, look no further.

Key specifications

Swipe to scroll horizontally

CPU:

Apple M5 Max (18 core)

NPU:

Apple Neural Engine

Graphics:

Integrated, 40 cores

Memory:

128GB LPDDR5

Storage:

4TB SSD, SDXC card slot

Screen size:

14in

Screen type:

Liquid Retina XDR (Mini-LED IPS)

Resolution:

3024 × 1964

Refresh rate:

120Hz

Colour gamut (measured):

93% P3

Brightness (measured):

300 nits

Ports:

3x Thunderbolt 5, 1x HDMI 2.1, 1x 3.5mm audio, Magsafe charging

Wireless connectivity:

Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 6

Dimensions:

155 x 313 x 221mm

Weight:

2.15kg

MacBook Pro looks like. It hasn’t changed for some time. This is a thicker laptop than the MacBook Air, but here in its 14-inch form (a 16-inch version is also available) it’s still smaller and more portable than the few Windows PCs that approach its performance level. It’s not super-thin, but it’s not chunky either. It comes in black or silver, has rounded corners and slab sides, its name is stamped into the underside and the Apple logo in the lid doesn’t light up.

The main design feature of the MacBook Pro is its simplicity. There is almost no difference between this model, which houses the monster M5 Max chip, and the vanilla M5 model that came out at the end of 2025. You’d be hard pressed to find a difference with the earlier M4 model, and looking all the way back to the days when MacBooks came with Touch Bars, there’s been a family resemblance that many European royal lines would be proud of.

Design score: 4/5

Geekbench: Tests the CPU for single-core and multi-core power, and the GPU for the system’s potential for gaming, image processing, or video editing. Geekbench AI tests the CPU and GPU on a variety of AI-powered and AI-boosted tasks.
Cinebench: Tests the CPU and GPU’s ability to run Cinema 4D and Redshift.

Swipe to scroll horizontallyBenchmark results

Test

MacBook Pro 14 M5 Max

MacBook Pro 14 M5

Acer Predator Helios 16 AI (Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX / GeForce RTX 5090)

Geekbench 6 CPU single-core

4,283

4,310

2,977

Geekbench 6 CPU multi-core

29,068

16,443

20,774

Geekbench 6 GPU (OpenCL)

146,477

48,665

214,989

Cinebench 2024 single-core

198

198

129

Cinebench 2024 multi-core

1,578

1,104

1,900

Cinebench 2024 GPU

20,590

6,053

Geekbench AI single-precision CPU

5,150

5,318

6,061

Geekbench AI single-precision GPU

27,360

13,219

28,312

Acer Predator Helios 16 AI as the top Windows laptop processor in fourth place. This is sure to change, but a few months into 2026, the M5 Max is the fastest chip out there.

This of course means it’s a dream in creative apps, helped immensely by a 40-core GPU that’s sitting somewhere around the level of Nvidia’s RTX 5070. It beats the 5070 in the Acer Predator Triton, but that was a lower-wattage model than many others sport, and in Cinebench’s rendering test comes in behind an RTX 5080 but ahead of an RTX 4090. Wherever it sits in the hierarchy, and comparing different GPU architectures across different APIs and operating systems is tricky, the likes of Photoshop and Premiere are no sweat for the MacBook Pro whatsoever.

Oddly, the M5 Max posts a very slightly lower score in single-precision AI work than the original M5 – they use the same 16-core NPU – but it’s still well up there in the top third of the table.

Performance score: 5/5

(Image credit: Future / Ian Evenden)

The MacBook Pro is the go-to laptop for creatives, and this 14in model is more reasonably priced than the M5 Max, yet still packs a processing punch.

The ProArt P16 is the flagship of ASUS’ new ProArt range for creative professionals, and proudly succeeds the mighty Studiobook as a powerful, feature-rich, studio-ready leader to rule the varied laptop tribes beneath it.

A laptop aimed at STEM professionals (and engineers) will attract anyone who needs rendering power, and that includes video editors and 3D artists. This 18-inch model from MSI certainly provides the power, but it comes at a price.

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