Verdict: The M5 MacBook Air is the best laptop for 90% of people, offering incredible battery life and a fanless, silent design. However, if your workflow involves sustained heavy loads like 8K video editing or 3D rendering, the active cooling and extra ports on the M5 MacBook Pro make it worth the premium.
How We Researched
To compare the M5 MacBook Air and M5 MacBook Pro, we aggregated benchmark data from Geebench 7 and Cinebench 2026, comparing single-core and multi-core performance. We also analyzed thermal throttling behavior during sustained 30-minute workloads and factored in real-world owner feedback regarding portability and battery life.
1. Design and Portability
The M5 MacBook Air continues Apple’s remarkably thin design language. It is virtually weightless in a backpack and features a fanless architecture, meaning it is completely silent regardless of the workload. The MacBook Pro is thicker and slightly heavier to accommodate its internal cooling fans and a larger battery.
- MacBook Air: Ultra-thin, fanless, available in four colors.
- MacBook Pro: Thicker, includes fans, features a higher-brightness Liquid Retina XDR display.
2. Performance and Thermal Throttling
Both machines feature the base M5 chip, meaning their burst performance (opening apps, browsing, light photo editing) is identical. The difference lies in sustained performance. Because the Air lacks a fan, it will throttle (slow down) its processor after about 5-10 minutes of heavy rendering to prevent overheating. The Pro will spin up its fans and maintain peak performance indefinitely.
| Feature | M5 MacBook Air | M5 MacBook Pro |
|---|---|---|
| Cooling | Passive (Fanless) | Active (Fans) |
| Sustained Workloads | Throttles after 10 mins | No throttling |
| Base Price | ~$1,099 as of July 2026 | ~$1,599 as of July 2026 |
3. Ports and Connectivity
If you hate dongles, the choice is easy. The MacBook Air only features two Thunderbolt ports (and MagSafe). The MacBook Pro adds a built-in HDMI 2.1 port and an SDXC card reader, making it vastly superior for photographers and videographers who need to offload media quickly.
- MacBook Air Ports: 2x Thunderbolt 4, MagSafe, Headphone jack.
- MacBook Pro Ports: 3x Thunderbolt 4, HDMI 2.1, SDXC, MagSafe, Headphone jack.
Final Thoughts
Don’t overspend if you don’t need to. The M5 MacBook Air provides more power than most desktop PCs from just a few years ago. Buy the Air for general productivity, coding, and light media creation. Buy the Pro only if your income relies on shaving minutes off export times. Which model fits your daily workflow better?
FAQ
Can the M5 MacBook Air drive two external monitors?
Yes. Unlike the older M1 and M2 models, the M5 MacBook Air natively supports up to two external displays even when the laptop lid is open, making it a fantastic machine for a desk setup.
Does the MacBook Pro have a better screen?
Yes. The MacBook Pro features a Liquid Retina XDR (Mini-LED) display with ProMotion (120Hz refresh rate). This makes scrolling noticeably smoother and allows for extreme peak brightness when watching HDR content, whereas the Air has a standard 60Hz LCD panel.

