
Aside from the price drops and Apple’s own quality guarantee, there’s something else to consider.Īpple often launches new MacBooks in the fall, and up until recently, the rumor mill had gone into overdrive with speculation that new 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro laptops were almost upon us. I mentioned at the start that there was a confluence of reasons why now is a great time to buy a refurbished Mac. New MacBooks have been delayed Omar Al-Ghosson on Unsplash And in the case of the 14-inch MacBook Pro, I couldn’t find a cheaper deal anywhere else. It’s possible you might find cheaper deals elsewhere, but no one will give you the same quality assurance you get from Apple’s own refurbishment. Aside from the base-model 14-inch MacBook Pro, you can save $360 on a 16-inch MacBook Pro with an M1 Pro chip, and $150 on an M1 MacBook Air. The price drops don’t extend to the entire MacBook range, but there are some real corkers. I’ve seen more common unicorns out in the wild. For a company as allergic to price cuts as Apple, that’s unheard of.

In practice, that means you can save almost $300 on an entry-level 14-inch MacBook Pro. We’re not talking a few dollars here and there - the price cuts jumped from 10% to 15%, a significant bump when you’re talking about laptops that can set you back thousands of dollars each. But recently Apple did something extremely out-of-character: it dropped the prices of its refurbished products. Not even second-hand devices can escape the Apple tax, it seems. The biggest Apple design fails and screw-ups of all timeĭell’s first Windows 11 ARM laptop is priced like a ChromebookĪpple could soon put an M3 chip in its worst laptopįor that reason, you can typically expect to pay a bit more for Macs refurbished by Apple compared to other companies.
