USD launch pricing, normalized storage, Geekbench 6
Apple Silicon Mac Pricing Lab
Compute Demand Signal
Affordability and supply pressure for high-memory personal compute.
Buyer Matrix
Best options by exact RAM tier at the selected equal-storage basis.
| Need | Cheapest | Best $/GB/s | Close alternatives | Signal |
|---|
RAM Timeline
Each lane is a memory tier. Dot size is bandwidth; greener dots are better $/GB/s.
Memory Shock
High-memory changes and removals that explain the discontinuities.
Price vs Memory Bandwidth
Every dot uses the same storage tier. Lower and farther right is better.
Current Read
$/GB/s Over Time
Uses historical models and observed price periods at the same storage basis.
Stack Lab
Combines current/projected machines for sharded local workloads.
Build a stack
Pick owned and possible machines to compare one sharded request versus separate jobs.
Configurations
Rows are generated from each model's memory options at the selected storage tier.
| Mac | Chip | Memory | Storage | Price | GB/s | BW first published | GB6 multi | $/GB | $/GB/s | $/GBxGB/s | $/GB6 multi | Status | Source |
|---|
Notes
This is a first-pass research dataset. Exact rows come from current price guides or original MSRP pages. Derived rows use Apple-style CTO deltas from model-specific sources. Retail discounts, education pricing, tax, AppleCare, peripherals, and used/refurbished pricing are excluded. Price periods are only split where a source identified a later memory-price change or option removal. Current base prices reflect Apple's June 25, 2026 across-the-board Mac price increase, which Apple attributed to the global memory shortage; high-memory upgrades rose too (for example the M5 Max 128GB option went from +$1,000 to +$2,000).