The MacBook Pro M5 can be a great college laptop, but whether it's your great college laptop depends on what you're studying and what you're willing to spend.
Let's talk money first. The base 14-inch M5 runs $1,599 retail, but education pricing drops it to $1,499. Apple's Back to School deals often throw in free AirPods or gift cards too. It's not cheap, but for the right major, it's an investment that'll carry you through all four years and into your first job.
So who actually needs this much laptop?
If you're studying computer science, graphic design, video production, architecture, engineering, or data science—basically anything where you'll be running intensive software—the M5 is worth it. We're talking virtual machines, code compilation, 3D modeling, video editing, CAD software, or crunching large datasets. The M5 handles all of that without breaking a sweat.
But here's the thing: if you're mostly writing papers, browsing the web, taking notes, and managing spreadsheets, you don't need this much power. A MacBook Air will do everything you need and cost less. The Pro's advantages show up when your coursework actually demands heavy processing.
Battery life is a legit advantage in college. Up to 24 hours rated life means you can get through a full day of classes, library sessions, and late-night study without hunting for outlets. That matters when every seat near a plug is taken during finals week.
The 14.2-inch screen is great for splitting your view between research and your paper. And that 120Hz ProMotion display makes scrolling through endless PDFs feel buttery smooth.
One heads-up: Apple's dropping support for Intel Macs in September 2026. If someone offers you a "deal" on a used Intel MacBook, pass. It's not a long-term play.