March 4 (Reuters) – Apple on Wednesday unveiled the MacBook Neo, a lower-priced addition to its laptop lineup starting at $599, as it looks to broaden its โreach in a price-sensitive PC market while rivals face tighter supply of โmemory chips.
A lower-priced laptop marks one of Apple’s most aggressive entry points into the PC market in years. โThe new MacBook will be powered by the A18 Pro chip, the same processor that debuted in the company’s iPhone 16 Pro models in 2024.
At $599, it is far cheaper in both nominal and inflation-adjusted terms than Apple’s previous non-Pro, non-Air MacBook, which debuted in May โ2006 at $1,099 – roughly $1,750 in todayโs โ dollars.
Customers can pre-order the device starting Wednesday, with deliveries and in-store availability beginning March 11, Apple said.
The new MacBook is not Apple’s first โ foray into the price point. The company made a special $699 MacBook Air specially for Walmart using its M1 chip, which originally debuted in 2020, after retiring other models with that chip.
The โnew MacBook โaims squarely at users of Google-powered Chromebooks โand lower-end Windows devices, where Microsoft’s โown efforts to shift to more battery-life-friendly chips made with technology from Arm have failed to ignite a sales boom.
Its foray into the mid-range PC segment could help Apple broaden its reach among students and first-time buyers.
In the midst of a global memory chip crunch, the new MacBookย also comes with only 8 gigabytes of unified memory,ย half of the โ16 gigabytes in the M4-based MacBook and less โthan the 12 gigabytes in the iPhone 17 Pro.
Global โPC and smartphone markets remain highly โprice sensitive after several quarters of uneven demand, and hardware makers โcontinue to navigate fluctuating component costs, particularly โfor memory chips.
Apple this โweek launched its $599 iPhone 17e with higher base storage and refreshed its MacBook Air and Pro lineup with new M5 chips and standard configurations with larger โmemory, as it looks to โdefend market share in competitive smartphone and softening PC markets, which are โstrained by rising memory costs.
(Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru and Stephen Nellis โin San Francisco; Editing by Anil D’Silva)


