Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

OLED MacBook Pros can’t come soon enough

Add as a preferred source on Google
Apple MacBook Pro 16 front angled view showing display and keyboard.
Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

OLED MacBooks have been rumored for years now, but ever since the OLED iPad Pro launch, it’s turned up the heat on speculation around when Macs will get the technology. And now, in a new report, global tech analyst group Omdia has shed light on the murky subject. While some sources have speculated 2025, and others 2027, Omdia’s principal analyst Ricky Park says 2026 is “highly likely.”

That might come as a disappointment to some who’d hoped for the massive update to come in the next generation of MacBook Pros, which would launch in late 2024 or 2025.

Recommended Videos

However, it looks like all this Apple OLED buzz is doing great things for the market. Apple’s first-ever tandem OLED display, which launched with the new iPad Pro on May 15, is projected to triple the demand for OLED displays this year compared to last.

Dubbed the Ultra Retina XDR, it uses two organic light-emitting diode (OLED) panels and combines the light from both of them to achieve 1,000 nits of brightness. According to Apple, this enables “sub-millisecond control” over each pixel, which improves color quality, contrast control, and refresh rates compared to LED displays.

Because this type of display is more expensive to manufacture than LED, companies typically only use them in top-of-the-range models. However, it’s expected that Apple will bring OLED displays to its entire tablet range eventually, which includes the cheaper iPad Air and iPad mini. This could mean that, although the MacBook Pro lineup will be first to get the upgrade, the MacBook Air could also go OLED in the future.

How these expensive displays will affect the overall pricing of the MacBook Pro is currently unknown. Before the new OLED iPad was announced, some sources feared a price tag as high as $1,800 for the 13-inch model, but now we know that prices start at $1,299. If this is anything to go by, perhaps the price jump won’t be that bad.

There’s also the fact that major manufacturers like Samsung Display and BOE have announced their investment in OLED facilities in response to growing demand. With more OLED displays being made by more companies, it’s possible that manufacturing costs could decrease a little, which could also help keep prices down for customers, too.

Willow Roberts
Willow Roberts has been a Computing Writer at Digital Trends for a year and has been writing for about a decade. She has a…
Wowed by computer-use AI agents? Research says they’re “digital disasters” even for routine tasks
Researchers tested 10 agents and models and found high rates of undesirable actions and real digital damage
ai-agent-handling-office-tasks

AI agents built to run everyday computer tasks have a serious context problem, according to new research from UC Riverside.

The team tested 10 agents and models from major developers, including OpenAI, Anthropic, Meta, Alibaba, and DeepSeek. On average, the agents took undesirable or potentially harmful actions 80% of the time and caused damage 41% of the time.

Read more
Bombshell OpenAI lawsuit claims your ChatGPT convos were shared with Google and Meta
A class action says OpenAI let Google and Meta trackers collect sensitive user data
OpenAI Sam Altman and LoveFrom Jony Ive with Laurene Powell Jobs

A new ChatGPT privacy lawsuit claims OpenAI shared user prompts and identifying information with Google and Meta tracking tools without proper consent.

The class action filed in California, according to Futurism, says data tied to ChatGPT users, including chat queries, emails, and user IDs, moved through tools such as Meta Pixel and Google Analytics. The case alleges that violated California privacy law and federal wiretap rules.

Read more
Dell expands AI PC lineup with new slim Dell 14s and 16s laptops
Your next Dell laptop could last all day without charging
Dell 16s AI PCs

Dell has introduced the new Dell 14S and Dell 16S laptops, expanding its AI-focused Copilot+ PC lineup with slimmer designs, updated Intel processors, and improved battery life. The company is positioning both laptops as premium productivity machines that combine AI features, portability, and multimedia capabilities in a thinner form factor.

The new laptops are powered by Intel Core Ultra Series 3 processors, going up to the Intel Core Ultra 9 386H chipset. Dell says both systems include on-device AI acceleration with up to 50 TOPS NPU performance, allowing AI-related tasks to run locally without relying entirely on cloud processing. AMD Ryzen AI 400 Series variants are also expected to arrive later this month.

Read more