MacBook Neo Disrupts a PC Market in Decline, IDC Says - MacRumors
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MacBook Neo Disrupts a PC Market in Decline, IDC Says

The global memory shortage that has already squeezed Mac mini and Mac Studio supply is now set to weigh heavily on the broader PC market, with IDC forecasting an 11.3% decline in global shipments for 2026.

macbook neo new lime
According to IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Personal Computing Device Tracker, conditions are expected to worsen progressively through the fourth quarter, when shipments are forecast to fall 20% year-over-year, with no meaningful relief expected before the end of 2027. Average selling prices are rising and PC manufacturers are struggling to maintain full product portfolios.

The first quarter of 2026 offered a deceptively encouraging signal, with shipments growing 3% versus the same period last year, but that strength was largely artificial; both consumer and commercial buyers pulled purchases forward ahead of anticipated price increases and availability constraints. Some of that first quarter momentum is carrying into the second quarter, but the remaining quarters are expected to deteriorate. IDC forecasts average selling price growth of 17% in 2026, and even as memory capacity expands over the next two years, pricing is unlikely to return to 2025 levels. TrendForce previously warned that surging memory and CPU costs could push mainstream laptop prices up by nearly 40% this year.

Against that backdrop, Apple's MacBook Neo has driven stronger-than-expected notebook demand and prompted IDC to revise its notebook forecast upward. Launched in March at $599, the ‌MacBook Neo‌ pairs the A18 Pro chip with 8GB of memory and targets the sub-$700 notebook segment. This market accounts for approximately 75 million units annually, nearly 40% of total notebook volume, which is a tier historically dominated by Windows and ChromeOS devices.

The ‌MacBook Neo‌'s competitive ripple effects cut both ways. IDC said the device is "putting real pressure on the entire PC ecosystem," and expects rivals to respond with new silicon, a more efficient OS from Microsoft, and aggressive promotional pricing. The competitive pressure from the ‌MacBook Neo‌ is providing a partial offset to broader price increases, keeping some low-cost notebook options alive, though the overall average selling price trajectory remains firmly upward.

While rising memory costs are pushing many PC vendors toward higher-priced systems or forcing specification cuts to defend lower price points, Apple has moved in the opposite direction. The memory shortage has had a more direct impact on Apple's higher-end Mac models, with ‌Mac mini‌ and ‌Mac Studio‌ models seeing configuration cuts and significant shipping delays as the company struggles to secure supply.

Related Roundup: MacBook Neo
Tag: IDC
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Top Rated Comments

raindogg Avatar
1 week ago
All this for AI Farms no one wanted and will ultimately harm us all.
Score: 21 Votes (Like | Disagree)
IIGS User Avatar
1 week ago
Everything got too expensive. From cars to computers and now people aren't spending their money unless they see real value in it.

The Neo came along at just the right time. Budgets are tight, people want perceived value. The Neo is relatively cheap. It's well constructed and it runs Mac OS.

Consumers often see Apple products as a "premium" purchase. Usually priced above the competition due to the fact it is a better product both from a physical and a software standpoint. The Neo offers both. No wonder it's selling in droves.

And what a way to "suck" people into the Apple ecosystem. Lots of people with iPhones who had only MSFT powered computers will get to see how easy it is to move between your phone and your computer with you iCloud account for things like passwords, email, etc. It brings in customers that will generate future sales.

If the new Siri is any good (that's a big IF) and it pulls together all the stuff on your phone and makes it so you're not dancing between your computer and your phone for all your stuff. Like you would have to do on a Windows box. It'll end up being revolutionary.

Kudos to Apple and whoever there came up with this one. It's clearly a winner.
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
racerhomie Avatar
1 week ago

With 8gb of ram, Apple shouldn’t allow it to run macOS 27 beta… every kid will install it and brick their mac
Get some sleep dude. The world is still working fine with 8GB of RAM
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
1 week ago
The end goal is dumb terminals and paying for timeshare services on multimillion dollar systems like in the 1970s before the PC revolution.
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
1 week ago
If the fate of PC computing is left up to the likes of Nvidia and Microsoft, they will snatch computing out of human hands and place everyone under a perpetual subscription model. Who wants that?

Whether it was strategic bungling, product conservatism, wise planning, or some crazy combination of all three, Apple has a model of sane AI compute that can be secure and run from a desktop/laptop. They can potentially turn this wicked desire of massive AI power centers that hoard resources and make utilities more expensive for humans worldwide on its head.

Whoda thunk a $599 well-built computer could do that?
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
con2apple Avatar
1 week ago
Of course, this also puts pressure on Apple to finally develop better software.

Because if the message at WWDC is, “Half the upgrades are only available for 16 GB+” or the Neo is already considered obsolete by 2027, then Apple is going to face massive problems.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)