Apple M1 Pro and M1 Max: Specs, Performance, Everything We Know

Apple is continuing it's crusade to banish Intel from its lineup with two more processors: the M1 Pro and M1 Max, professional-grade processors debuting in the 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros.

Here's everything you need to know about the M1 Pro and M1 Max in one spot. We also have a separate article on the original M1.

Apple M1 Pro and M1 Max Specifications

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Apple Silicon Specifications
Header Cell - Column 0 M1M1 ProM1 Max
Process Node5nm5nm5nm
Transistors16 billion33.7 billion57 billion
CPU Cores88 or 1010
GPU Cores7 or 814 or 1624 or 32
Memory Bandwidth68.25 GBps200 GBps400 GBps
Maximum Memory16GB32GB64GB
Andrew E. Freedman

Andrew E. Freedman is a senior editor at Tom's Hardware focusing on laptops, desktops and gaming. He also keeps up with the latest news. A lover of all things gaming and tech, his previous work has shown up in Tom's Guide, Laptop Mag, Kotaku, PCMag and Complex, among others. Follow him on Threads @FreedmanAE and BlueSky @andrewfreedman.net. You can send him tips on Signal: andrewfreedman.01

  • waltc3
    Fight against Intel? Intel's only fight atm is with AMD...;) Apple need not apply...;)
    Reply
  • ezst036
    Apple's rollout for these M1xyz processor lines is quite brilliant and commendable.

    The original M1 gets a bunch of companies to port their software or at least evaluating, and after some time has passed now the laptops are here which will complete the process of mainstreaming it all. The IMac Pros are probably not far behind.

    The real fun song and dance will be later when they cram some M1 derivative with 128 cores into the Mac Pro tower and charge a fat $30,000 dollars or more for it.

    People also overlook - these SoCs have video capabilities in them. When is Apple going to do what Intel is doing with the Arc and split off the GPU into a PCI-E (Mac only of course) product and dump Radeons to the curb?
    Reply
  • Heat_Fan89
    Yeah, I don’t see how this relates to Apple vs Intel? Two different platforms. Now if Apple were to allow Windows PC’s to run on their chips then okay. As impressive as the specs are you are not going to play the latest and greatest AAA PC games in ultra mode on a Macbook Pro.

    I’m not throwing shade on Apple silicon. Their chips are designed to run exclusively on Apple hardware.
    Reply
  • maik80
    Apple will go to games next
    Reply
  • jeremyj_83
    64GB max for 32 cores but 400 GB/sec bandwidth. That puts it at 16 channels at 4GB DIMMs, unless they are doing some weird GDDR5 or 6 on the motherboard.
    Reply
  • Giroro
    Hopefully the M1 pro finds its way into the 24in iMac sooner rather than later.... without a price hike.
    That would be an interesting computer if it had enough RAM, storage, and GPU power to justify its high price.
    Reply
  • hotaru.hino
    Giroro said:
    Hopefully the M1 pro finds its way into the 24in iMac sooner rather than later.... without a price hike.
    That would be an interesting computer if it had enough RAM, storage, and GPU power to justify its high price.
    Nah, there's a reason why there's a "Pro" in the name ;)

    They might do a refresh of that iMac Pro lineup though.
    Reply
  • JamesSneed
    Heat_Fan89 said:
    Yeah, I don’t see how this relates to Apple vs Intel? Two different platforms. Now if Apple were to allow Windows PC’s to run on their chips then okay. As impressive as the specs are you are not going to play the latest and greatest AAA PC games in ultra mode on a Macbook Pro.

    I’m not throwing shade on Apple silicon. Their chips are designed to run exclusively on Apple hardware.

    Pat was saying Intel wanted to win Apple business back. This pretty much kills that idea anytime soon. Intel could have pushed to sell Apple for higher end chips, desktop etc but seeing this no way Apple goes for it as they have powerfull chips.
    Reply
  • tummybunny
    'Both the M1 Pro and M1 Max have the same 16-core neral engine for machine learning tasks'

    This should read - neural engine.
    Reply
  • bgillander
    Heat_Fan89 said:
    Yeah, I don’t see how this relates to Apple vs Intel? Two different platforms. Now if Apple were to allow Windows PC’s to run on their chips then okay. As impressive as the specs are you are not going to play the latest and greatest AAA PC games in ultra mode on a Macbook Pro.

    I’m not throwing shade on Apple silicon. Their chips are designed to run exclusively on Apple hardware.
    Well, the two previous MacBook Pro models that were replaced by these new models did use Intel processors, so that is a fairly direct relationship.
    Reply