Mac mini M5/M5 Pro (2026): Everything we know so far

Macworld

  • Apple is expected to launch an M5 and M5 Pro Mac mini in 2026, potentially around WWDC in June, but ongoing supply shortages and high AI-driven demand could delay the release until later in the year.
  • The next Mac mini is expected to focus heavily on AI and graphics performance, with improved M5 chips, faster SSDs and higher baseline storage, while keeping the compact 5-by-5-inch design introduced in 2024.
  • Prices may increase compared to the current generation after Apple discontinued the $599 base model, potentially making the next Mac mini start at $699–$799 depending on storage and configuration.

The Mac mini is one of Apple’s most compelling Macs, combining strong performance, a compact design, and a relatively affordable starting price. Following its major redesign in late 2024, the desktop became smaller, faster, and more versatile than ever, featuring a dramatically reduced 5-by-5-inch footprint alongside Apple’s M4 and M4 Pro chips.

If you’re considering buying a Mac mini, you may be wondering whether a new model is on the horizon, what upgrades a 2026 refresh could bring, and whether Apple will maintain its attractive entry-level pricing. While there was no new Mac mini at Apple’s March 2026 “Special Experience” event, the company did unveil the M5 Pro chip – widely expected to power at least one next-generation Mac mini configuration.

Although Apple has not confirmed a release date for the M5 Mac mini, a launch around WWDC in June remains possible. However, ongoing supply constraints, including extended delivery times and limited stock of existing models, have complicated expectations. These shortages could indicate that a refresh is approaching, but they may also reflect broader global component supply issues that could delay the next Mac mini.

Below, we break down everything we expect from the 2026 Mac mini, including possible performance upgrades, new configurations, pricing expectations, and other key changes.

New 2026 Mac mini release date: When will Apple update the M5 Mac mini?

  • June 2026 release possible, but supply constraints may push launch

As of May 2026, the Mac mini lineup is facing significant availability issues caused by a combination of supply chain constraints and rising demand. Apple has already reshaped the lineup by discontinuing the entry-level 256GB model, effectively raising the starting price of the Mac mini. The company has also removed some higher-memory configurations from its online store, while shipping estimates for remaining models have stretched from several weeks to as long as 10–12 weeks for certain RAM options, compared to 3-4 weeks shipping for the new entry-level model with 512GB SSD and 16GB RAM.

During Apple’s Q2 2026 earnings call, CEO Tim Cook acknowledged that supply constraints are likely to continue for several months. He explained that the primary bottleneck is limited availability of the advanced manufacturing nodes used for Apple’s M-series chips, although rising memory prices and wider global RAM shortages are also contributing factors. Demand from AI data centers has placed additional pressure on the memory market, affecting availability across Apple’s Mac lineup.

These shortages could point to two very different scenarios. On one hand, they may simply reflect ongoing global component shortages and rising DRAM costs. On the other, dwindling stock levels often precede a hardware refresh, leading to speculation that Apple is preparing to launch updated Mac mini models in the near future.

Apple introduced M5, M5 Pro, and M5 Max chips in updated MacBook Pro and MacBook Air models in March 2026, but the Mac mini was notably absent. That is not unusual for Apple, which often staggers desktop updates behind its laptop releases. Desktop Macs also tend to follow less predictable refresh cycles than MacBooks. The Mac mini, in particular, has seen irregular updates over the years, with some generations lasting far longer than others. The M1 Mac mini remained on sale for nearly three years before the M2 model arrived, and Apple skipped the M3 generation entirely before moving to the M4 in late 2024.

Despite the uncertainty, a 2026 refresh still appears highly likely. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reported in late 2025 that Apple was developing M5 and M5 Pro Mac mini models, and reiterated in early 2026 that updated versions remained on Apple’s roadmap. A launch around WWDC in June is still possible, but continued supply constraints and speculation surrounding Apple’s future M6 chips could push the release into the second half of 2026.

Factors affecting availability of the Mac mini

The Mac mini’s current supply constraints and unusually high demand could significantly affect the launch timing and availability of new models. Limited manufacturing capacity for Apple’s advanced M-series chips, combined with global RAM shortages, may restrict Apple’s ability to produce enough next-generation Mac minis at launch, potentially delaying the release until supply stabilizes. At the same time, strong demand from AI developers and businesses using the Mac mini as a compact AI server is rapidly depleting existing inventory, complicating Apple’s transition between generations. While dwindling stock levels can sometimes indicate that a refresh is imminent, the broader component shortages affecting the industry could just as easily reduce launch availability or delay the M5 Mac mini altogether.

Global supply constraints

As of May 2026, the Mac mini is facing significant supply shortages, with low stock at retailers and some configurations disappearing from Apple’s online store. The main issue is limited manufacturing capacity for Apple’s advanced M-series chips, which Tim Cook recently described as the primary bottleneck. A wider global memory shortage has added further pressure, particularly for higher-RAM models, as AI data centers compete for the same components. Rising production costs have also pushed Apple to discontinue the $599 base model, steering buyers toward more expensive configurations.

High demand due to popularity of Mac mini for AI

At the same time, demand for the Mac mini has surged because of its growing popularity as a compact AI server. Developers and companies are increasingly using it to run local AI agents and large language models (LLMs), leading to temporary sell-outs at major retailers. The Mac mini has long been popular as Apple’s most affordable and versatile desktop, but its combination of Apple silicon, unified memory architecture, compact size, and energy efficiency has made it especially attractive for AI workloads and 24/7 local AI setups.

The Mac mini’s unified memory architecture allows the CPU and GPU to share the same memory pool, improving performance for AI tasks compared to traditional PCs with separate RAM and VRAM. Combined with its small footprint and relatively low starting price, it offers an accessible entry point for AI development. However, there are trade-offs: memory and storage cannot be upgraded after purchase, higher RAM configurations are recommended for serious AI work, and users must supply their own monitor and peripherals. Some analysts also believe the limited availability could indicate Apple is preparing updated hardware, although supply issues may have delayed the expected M5 Mac mini launch until later in 2026.

2026 Mac mini M5 processor: M5 and M5 Pro chips explained

  • Expected to offer M5 and M5 Pro options.

Apple

Apple has yet to establish a consistent upgrade cycle with the Mac mini since the introduction of Apple Silicon (M-series chips). Apple released M1 and M2 versions but skipped the M3 and went with the M4. So, Apple isn’t afraid to skip a chip cycle with the Mac mini. However, it looks like Apple isn’t going to skip the M5:

  • In November 2025, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reported that Apple has the Mac mini on the 2026 release schedule with M5 and M5 Pro chips.
  • Then, in December 2025, MacRumors reported that references to the M5 and M5 Pro Mac mini appeared in a set of leaked Apple files.

The new Mac mini is likely to shop M5 and M5 Pro chips, both are already on the market, so we know what to expect from them:

Apple’s M5 chip: Debuted in October 2025. It represents a significant shift in Apple silicon by prioritizing graphics performance and on-device artificial intelligence. While it maintains the 3-nanometer architecture of its predecessor, it introduces a new GPU design that incorporates dedicated hardware for AI tasks.

Apple’s M5 Pro chip: Arrived in March 2026. It introduces a new “Fusion Architecture” combining two dies into one SoC. It offers an 18-core CPU architecture (with 6 super cores and 12 performance cores) and improved multithreaded performance and AI capabilities.

At a glance: Expected performance improvements

As seen in our review of the M5 MacBook Pro and our review of the M5 Max MacBook Pro, the biggest gains for the M5 chip come in graphics and AI-related workloads, rather than raw CPU speed.

  • Graphics: GPU performance appears noticeably improved over the M4 generation, although results vary depending on workload and chip tier. Our benchmarks of the M5 Pro and M5 Max suggest graphics gains ranging from roughly 10% to 30%, with larger improvements in AI-assisted compute tasks.
  • AI and machine learning: Apple is positioning the M5 family heavily around on-device AI performance. New neural acceleration features could significantly improve local AI workloads such as image generation and large language model inference compared to previous-generation Macs.
  • Storage speeds: Apple says some M5 Pro and M5 Max systems can deliver up to twice the SSD performance of earlier models, although real-world results will vary depending on storage configuration.
  • CPU performance: CPU improvements appear more iterative than transformational. Early benchmarks suggest around 10–15% faster single-core performance compared to equivalent M4 systems, alongside somewhat larger multi-core gains in higher-end configurations.

Why the next Mac mini could be a huge AI upgrade

The next Mac mini could become one of Apple’s biggest AI upgrades yet thanks to the M5 chip’s expected focus on machine learning and neural processing. In recent releases, Apple has been seen to be prioritizing AI performance improvements far more heavily than raw CPU gains, with faster local image generation, improved large language model performance, and better support for on-device AI tools. That could make the next Mac mini especially appealing to developers, creators, and power users experimenting with AI workloads without relying on cloud services.

M5-powered Mac mini specs: Will the new Mac mini have better specs and configurations?

  • Faster 512GB SSD as standard
  • Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) and Bluetooth 6 possible

Simon Jary / Foundry

In October 2024, Apple upgraded the base unified memory (RAM) for the Mac mini to 16GB, moving away from the long-standing 8GB entry point. We expect that this 16GB baseline will continue with the M5 models to support multitasking and modern AI workloads.

As with the current M4 models, the new 2026 Mac mini models are likely to offer configurations up to 32GB of RAM for the standard chip and higher for the Pro versions (up to 64GB RAM).

The SSD specs could improve, though. When Apple introduced the new MacBook Pro and MacBook Air in March 2026 is doubled the storage at the entry level. So it is likely that Apple will mirror this with the Mac mini, moving from 256GB SSD to 512 SSB. It’s also likely to offer up to 4TB SSD as a build to order option for the M5 model, while 8TB will remain the limit for the M5 Pro. This storage is also faster.

The M4 Mac mini has Thunderbolt 4, while the M4 Pro Mac mini has Thunderbolt 5. The MacBook Pro with M5 chip also features Thunderbolt 4, so that’s what will be in the M5 Mac mini. While specifications on the M5 Pro have not been reported, it will likely have Thunderbolt 5.

The current Mac mini has Wi-Fi 6E (802.11ax) and Bluetooth 5.3. This didn’t change with the M5 MacBook Pro in October 2025, but, in March 2026, Apple added Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 6 to the new MacBook Pro and MacBook Air models, so it is likely to do the equivalent with the M5 and M5 Pro Mac mini.

At a glance: Expected specs

  • From 16GB RAM (M5); 24GB RAM (M5 Pro)
  • From 512GB SSD and up to 4TB SSD (M5); 8TB SSD (M5 Pro)
  • Thunderbolt 4 (M5); Thunderbolt 5 (M5 Pro)
  • Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) and Bluetooth 6

2026 Mac mini M5 design: Are any design changes expected to the Mac mini

  • No design changes expected.

Foundry

The M4 Mac mini underwent a significant physical redesign in October 2024, shrinking to a 5-by-5-inch enclosure. This design will be in place for several years to come. The M5 update is anticipated to focus on internal performance enhancements with no changes to the physical chassis.

No reports have been made on whether Apple will offer new colors – so no Space Gray Mac mini is likely.

New 2026 Mac mini M5: Ports

The port offerings are also expected to remain the same as the M4 Mac mini:

  • 2 front USB-C ports (supporting USB 3 at 10Gbps)
  • Front 3.5mm audio jack
  • 3 rear Thunderbolt ports
  • HDMI port
  • Gigabit ethernet port (10Gb ethernet option available)

Apple’s Mac mini M5 price: Will the price of the Mac mini increase?

  • Price likely to increase compared to M4 generation.

Recent changes to the Mac mini lineup suggest Apple may be shifting its pricing strategy, effectively increasing the cost of entry for buyers. In May 2026, Apple removed the most affordable 256GB version of the M4 Mac mini from its online store, leaving the 512GB configuration as the new base model.

Before that change, the 2024 Mac mini lineup started at:

  • $599/£599/CA$799/AU$999 — M4, 16GB unified memory, 256GB SSD – DISCONTINUED
  • $799/£799/CA$1,099/AU$1,299 — M4, 16GB unified memory, 512GB SSD
  • $999/£999/CA$1,399/AU$1,599 — M4, 24GB unified memory, 512GB SSD
  • $1,399/£1,399/CA$1,999/AU$2,199 — M4 Pro, 24GB unified memory, 512GB SSD

With the $599 model now discontinued, the effective starting price of the Mac mini has risen to $799. That marks a notable change for a product long known for its affordability. When the Mac mini launched in 2005, it started at $499, and for nearly two decades Apple kept the entry price relatively close to that figure.

Pricing for the upcoming M5 Mac mini has not been confirmed, but Apple’s recent moves suggest the next generation could launch with a higher starting price. One possibility is that Apple simply carries over the current strategy, making a 512GB SSD the standard entry-level configuration and pricing the M5 Mac mini at $799. Another possibility is a more modest increase, similar to Apple’s recent MacBook pricing strategy, where entry-level prices rose alongside larger base storage capacities. In that scenario, the next Mac mini could start around $699/£699 with 512GB of storage.

There are several reasons prices could increase further, including rising component costs, global memory shortages, and potential tariffs. Apple is also expected to begin assembling some Mac mini models at a Foxconn facility in Texas later in 2026 while continuing production in Asia. U.S. manufacturing could help Apple avoid certain tariffs, although domestic production may also increase costs in other areas.

At the same time, Apple may choose to keep pricing stable to preserve the Mac mini’s reputation as its most affordable desktop Mac. The launch of the $599 MacBook Neo also changes the equation slightly, since the Mac mini is no longer Apple’s only low-cost Mac option. In some respects, the MacBook Neo may offer better overall value because it includes a built-in display, keyboard, and battery.

Should you wait to buy the Mac mini?

If you need a Mac mini immediately, there may be little choice but to buy one now – although availability remains limited. Current delivery estimates range from three to four weeks for standard configurations, while models with higher RAM capacities can take up to 10–12 weeks to ship.

However, if you can afford to wait, we recommend holding off until after WWDC in June, as Apple could announce updated Mac mini models or share new details about its desktop Mac lineup at the event.

Under normal circumstances, we would also suggest looking for discounts on existing models or considering Apple Certified Refurbished options. Unfortunately, ongoing supply shortages mean that stock is currently limited across both new and refurbished Mac mini configurations.

Considering an alternative? Read our Best Mac buying guide.

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