Apple’s week of Mac announcements has wrapped up this morning with the launch of the new M4 MacBook Pros, and we now have a full picture of the M4 chip lineup that will drive the Mac for the next year or so (excepting the M4 Ultra, if we end up getting one).
Because Apple staggered its product and chip announcements, we’ve gathered some basic specs from all versions of the M4, M4 Pro, and M4 Max to help compare them to the outgoing M2 and M3 chip families, including the slightly cut-down versions that Apple sells in the cheaper new Macs. We’ve also rounded up some of Apple’s performance claims, so people with older Macs can see exactly what they’re getting if they upgrade (Apple still likes to use the M1 as a baseline, acknowledging that the year-over-year gains are sometimes minor and that many people are still getting by just fine with some version of the M1 chip).
Comparing all the M4 chips
CPU P/E-cores
GPU cores
RAM options
Display support (including internal)
Memory bandwidth
Available in
Apple M4 (low)
4/4
8
16/24GB
Up to two
120GB/s
$1,299 iMac
Apple M4 (high)
4/6
10
16/24/32GB
Up to three
120GB/s
$1,499 iMac, $599 Mac mini, $1,599 MacBook Pro
Apple M4 Pro (low)
8/4
16
24/48/64GB
Up to three
273GB/s
$1,399 Mac mini, $1,999 14-inch MBP
Apple M4 Pro (high)
10/4
20
24/48/64GB
Up to three
273GB/s
$1,599 Mac mini, $2,199 14-inch MBP, $2,499 16-inch MBP
Apple M4 Max (low)
10/4
32
36GB
Up to five
410GB/s
$3,199 14-inch MBP, $3,499 16-inch MBP
Apple M4 Max (high)
12/4
40
48/64/128GB
Up to five
546GB/s
$3,699 14-inch MBP, $3,999 16-inch MBP
At least as far as the Mac is concerned, Apple has technically released six different chips this week under three different brand names. The M4, M4 Pro, and M4 Max all have one slightly cut-down entry-level version with fewer CPU and GPU cores and one more-expensive, fully enabled version.