MacBook Neo Outsells M5 Pro in Three Weeks of Q1 Sales

What You Need to Know
- MacBook Neo shipped 1.1 million units in three weeks, outselling M5 MacBook Pro’s 550,000 quarterly units.
- U.S. represented 44% of MacBook Neo sales, higher domestic concentration than typical Apple Mac launches.
- Dell launched $699 XPS 13 this week, explicitly citing MacBook Neo as competitive pressure.
- Apple’s Mac market share in budget segment could grow from 2% to 15% as Neo matures.
Apple’s cheapest Mac ever sold more units in three weeks than the M5 MacBook Pro managed in an entire quarter. That gap tells you something the launch-day press coverage mostly glossed over.
The MacBook Neo shipped 1.1 million units globally in Q1, but it only went on sale in mid-March, leaving roughly three weeks of the quarter to work with. The M5 MacBook Air, a product with no availability constraint and a full quarter on shelves, moved 900,000 units. The M5 MacBook Pro managed 550,000. On an annualized basis, the Neo’s trajectory is not close.
The $599 price is the obvious explanation, but the more interesting detail is where those units went. The U.S. took 44% of global shipments, which is a higher domestic concentration than Apple typically sees on Mac launches. India accounted for around 18,000 units despite retailers struggling to maintain stock, a number that will look modest only until supply catches up.
The competitive pressure is already visible
Dell’s response this week is the clearest signal that rivals are paying attention. The company unveiled a new XPS 13 starting at $699 and explicitly cited the MacBook Neo’s arrival as the reason, which is an unusual amount of candor from a competitor acknowledging it was caught off guard.
The A18 Pro chip rather than an M-series processor is the architectural trade-off that makes the price possible, and it puts the Neo in a market segment where Apple previously held about 2% share. IDC thinks that figure could reach 15% as the product matures, which would represent a larger share shift than anything Apple has attempted in the Mac lineup in years.
IDC is forecasting a “very big spike” in shipments this quarter as supply constraints ease. The Q1 number, already distorted upward by pent-up demand and downward by limited availability, is probably the least reliable data point in what will eventually be a much longer story.
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