Record-Low M5 MacBook Air Prices Make the Jump to Mac Easier
Amazon’s Memorial Day promotion has pushed the 13‑inch MacBook Air M5 to its lowest price yet at USD 899.99 (approx. RM4,280), a USD 200 (approx. RM950) drop from its original USD 1,099 (approx. RM5,220). This configuration is notably generous compared to past entry-level Macs: Apple has removed the cramped 256GB tier, so this deal gets you 16GB of unified memory and a 512GB SSD, with faster read and write speeds than the previous M4 generation. All four finishes—Sky Blue, Starlight, Midnight, and Silver—are included at this reduced price, making it a true across-the-board MacBook Air M5 deal rather than a clearance of a single color. With up to 18 hours of rated battery life and a fanless, ultra‑portable chassis, this discount turns what was firmly a premium-only option into a realistic upgrade for students, commuters, and everyday knowledge workers.

15‑Inch MacBook Air M5: Lowest Price on a Big‑Screen Productivity Machine
If you prefer a larger display without the weight and cost of a Pro, the 15‑inch MacBook Air M5 is also at a lowest‑ever price on Amazon’s Memorial Day sales. This model pairs the same M5 chip with a 15.3‑inch Liquid Retina display, 16GB of unified memory, and a 512GB SSD, creating one of the most balanced thin‑and‑light laptops for productivity. At this discount level, you are getting a machine that comfortably handles multitasking, browsing, office work, and light‑to‑moderate creative tasks like photo editing, coding, and basic video work, all in a chassis that remains fanless and silent. The M5 architecture brings improved CPU, GPU, and AI performance, backed by a 16‑core Neural Engine and high memory bandwidth, so common AI‑assisted workflows and Apple Intelligence features feel responsive. For buyers hunting for the lowest price MacBook with a truly expansive screen, this Air sits in a sweet spot that previously belonged to bulkier Windows machines.

M5 Pro MacBook Pro: USD 200 Off a Creators’ Workhorse
Power users who need more than an Air can now find a compelling MacBook Pro M5 discount. Amazon has cut USD 200 (approx. RM950) off the 14‑inch M5 Pro MacBook Pro, dropping it to USD 1,999 (approx. RM9,490). This configuration is built for intensive workloads, with a 15‑core CPU, 16‑core GPU, 24GB of unified memory, and a fast 1TB PCIe NVMe Gen 5 SSD. That combination boosts both single‑core and multi‑core performance, while also providing ample graphics horsepower for editing, 3D content, and complex timelines. The 14‑inch mini‑LED display is a highlight for visual professionals, offering deep contrast and high brightness for HDR content. Despite its power, Apple claims up to 24 hours of video streaming battery life, and the port selection—two Thunderbolt 5 ports, HDMI, SD card reader, and MagSafe—caters directly to photographers, videographers, and developers who depend on external gear.

Why M5 Chip Laptops Are Ideal for Students and Professionals
Across both Air and Pro lines, Apple’s M5 chip is central to why these deals are so compelling. The M5 architecture delivers a strong mix of performance and energy efficiency, making each M5 chip laptop feel quick in daily use while still offering exceptional battery life. In the Air models, the fanless design stays silent yet handles productivity, web workloads, and creative apps such as Lightroom, music production tools, and coding environments. In the Pro variant, the higher‑core M5 Pro configuration scales that performance for heavy rendering, large projects, and demanding multitasking. Apple’s unified memory architecture means the same memory pool feeds both CPU and GPU, which improves responsiveness in creative software and AI tasks. For students juggling research, note‑taking, and light editing, or professionals working on complex documents, codebases, or media, these discounted M5 MacBooks deliver long‑term headroom rather than just meeting today’s minimum requirements.

MacBooks vs Windows: A Real Shift in Laptop Value
Historically, MacBooks were the aspirational choice—sleek hardware and tight software integration at a noticeably higher price than comparable Windows laptops. But with memory shortages driving up component costs across the PC industry, many Windows makers are raising prices, especially on models with sufficient RAM and storage. Apple, leveraging its supply chain and in‑house chip strategy, has avoided the worst of this squeeze. Entry into the Mac ecosystem now starts with devices like the MacBook Neo, and these new M5 MacBook Air and Pro discounts push higher‑end models into territory that directly challenges mid‑range and even premium Windows competition. When you factor in 16GB unified memory and 512GB SSD standard on the discounted Airs, plus the M5 Pro MacBook Pro’s 24GB RAM and 1TB SSD at a USD 200 (approx. RM950) cut, the value equation has flipped: for many buyers, Mac is no longer the expensive outlier but the sensible, future‑proof option.

