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Here's How Much Faster MacBook Air Gets With M5 Chip vs. M4 Chip

We now know how much faster the new MacBook Air with the M5 chip is compared to the previous model with an M4 chip, courtesy of a Geekbench 6 result shared by TechRadar's Lance Ulanoff. However, given the 14-inch MacBook Pro and the iPad Pro were already updated with the M5 chip last year, the result is not too surprising.

MacBook Air 15 Inch Feature Purple
Ulanoff ran Geekbench on a MacBook Air with an M5 chip, which has a 10-core CPU. The laptop achieved a score of 17,073 for multi-core CPU performance, whereas the MacBook Air with an M4 chip has an average multi-core score of 14,731, so the new model is up to 15% faster than the previous generation. This is in line with what Apple advertised when it announced the M5 chip back in October, so it was entirely expected.

With the M5 chip, the Geekbench database shows that the MacBook Air is up to 16% faster than the MacBook Pro with the M3 Pro chip from a few years ago, but it is still slower than MacBook Pro models with the M4 Pro chip and newer.

The table below provides a comparison of Geekbench 6 scores for various Macs. Each chip has the highest number of CPU cores available for it.

Mac Model Multi-Core CPU Score
MacBook Pro (M5 Max) 29,233
Mac Studio (M3 Ultra) 27,726
MacBook Pro (M4 Max) 25,702
MacBook Pro (M4 Pro) 22,490
MacBook Pro (M3 Max) 20,960
MacBook Air (M5) 17,073
MacBook Pro (M3 Pro) 15,260
MacBook Pro (M2 Max) 14,740
MacBook Air (M4) 14,731
MacBook Pro (M2 Pro) 14,451
MacBook Pro (M1 Max) 12,345
MacBook Pro (M1 Pro) 12,345
MacBook Air (M3) 12,020
MacBook Air (M2) 9,709
MacBook Neo (A18 Pro) 8,668
MacBook Air (M1) 8,342

The new MacBook Air is available to pre-order now and launches on Wednesday, March 11.

For additional benchmarks, see our coverage of Geekbench results for the MacBook Pro with the M5 Max chip and the MacBook Neo with the A18 Pro chip.

Related Roundup: MacBook Air
Buyer's Guide: MacBook Air (Buy Now)
Related Forum: MacBook Air

Top Rated Comments

gusping Avatar
4 weeks ago
Whoever posts these Geekbench score articles needs to learn about tables. Having a pure text article for this topic makes zero sense.
Score: 19 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Joe Rossignol Avatar
4 weeks ago

Whoever posts these Geekbench score articles needs to learn about tables. Having a pure text article for this topic makes zero sense.
Thanks for the feedback. I added a table. Hope that helps!
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
turbineseaplane Avatar
4 weeks ago
What about GPU performance?

The CPU is more than enough on the M4 already
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
turbineseaplane Avatar
4 weeks ago

I downgraded my M4 mini to Sequoia as soon as I got it. Cannot be dealing with the mess that is Tahoe.
If they’re round the corners any more, the UI is going to be a circle
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
turbineseaplane Avatar
4 weeks ago

In UK can get MBA M4 16/512 for £999 on Amazon UK right now. Its tempting, but its also tempting just to pay the extra £100 and get the M5 model for the most upto date tech. It needs to last me 10 years like my MBP 2015.
Given the state of Tahoe, I prefer an M4 so I can put Sequoia on it
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
4 weeks ago

What about GPU performance?

The CPU is more than enough on the M4 already
Exactly. This is where the most gains come from between M4 and M5. The metal score of M4 is around 55000 compared to about 76000 on the M5.

It’s quite a significant jump and not sure why it wasn’t mentioned in the article.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)