Should you upgrade to the 2020 iPad Pro?
Now that the new 2020 iPad Pros are upon us, we examine who should -- and who shouldn't -- consider upgrading to Apple's latest pro tablets. Whether you have the previous 2018 iPad Pro, an iPad Air, or something else, we are here to make your decision easier.

2020 iPad Pro design mockup sits behind a 2018 iPad Pro.
To make deciding easier, we've broken down our guide into different sections, based on which device you are currently using as you grapple with the decision to upgrade or not to upgrade.
For those with iPads that are doing just fine and are fulfilling your needs at least adequately -- you don't need to upgrade to the 2020 iPad Pro. The 2020 models of the Pros aren't all that different than the 2018 iPad Pro line, and if you weren't convinced by the 2018 models during the last two years the 2020 won't likely sway you any further. There's nothing wrong with an upgrade, especially if you just want something new, but the previous-gen 2018 iPad Pro on sale or an iPad Air may do you just fine.
Then there are those who do require an update from an older iPad. Those of you in this boat should have no qualms about jumping to the new iPad Pro. The only thing we'd recommend is to think about what you do with the tablet. If you are mainly consuming media, watching movies and TV, reading, social media, etc then the iPad Pro may be more tablet than you need. You'd be just as well off with the 2018 iPad Pro or the iPad Air 3 and can save yourself some cash in the process.
2018 iPad Pro (left) and the 2017 iPad Pro (right)
What are you waiting for? The new iPad Pro has all the brilliant redesigned features of the 2018 line plus even more. The 2018 was a great upgrade cycle for iPad Pro and if you held off on that for Apple to refine it and add any additional features then this is where you want to be.
Plus, the 2017 iPad Pro won't work with the Magic Keyboard and the likelihood of third-party models coming for a three-year-old design isn't high.
You are probably one who pushes the iPad but didn't want to upgrade after only a year. Now that it has been more than a year since the previous-generation dropped it is not a bad time at all to pull the trigger.
If you are looking to boost your productivity, however, we'd recommend perhaps picking up one of the new Logitech keyboard cases that now integrate a full multi-touch trackpad.

The single 12MP wide-angle camera bump on the 2018 iPad Pro
The biggest hurdle is that the iPad Pro is Apple's most expensive tablet and shelling out between $800 and over $2000 is no small chunk of change. For that reason, we recommend most users with the 2018 iPad Pro hold off and don't bother upgrading to the 2020 iPad Pros.
There are differences between the two models -- we explored those extensively -- but they aren't going to be huge game-changers. Yes, graphics will be notably better. Wi-Fi 6 will be faster -- assuming you have Wi-Fi 6 routers in your home or office. And sure, the new camera and LiDAR will have benefits. But those together won't be enough to warrant the substantial amount of money required for the upgrade.
In this particular case, we'd say stay put, save yourself the money, and spend the $300 to $350 on the new Magic Keyboard when it ships in May to boost the functionality and features of your existing device.
Where we would say it would be worth upgrading is if you are doing anything very graphics-heavy, like editing huge photos or working with video. In this case, the new iPad Pro with its eight-core GPU will be beneficial. It also may be a good time to upgrade storage as well.

Editing images on the 2018 iPad Pro
When we picked up the 2018 iPad Pro, we didn't think we were going to keep it. We wanted to try it out before upgrading from our 2017 iPad Pro. But the redesign that the 2018 had was so good that we ended up sticking with it. Unfortunately, we only picked up the base 64GB of storage. As video and photo editors, that was a far cry from what we needed and we paid the price after only a month or two of use.
After a year and a half of painfully managing storage, we are eager to upgrade to a higher capacity and will also be thrilled with improved graphics, faster Wi-Fi, and even the U1 chip when it is eventually taken advantage of.
For those reasons, we upgraded our personal units to the latest model.
Discounts on Apple's new 2020 iPad Pro are already in effect, with the latest deals available in the AppleInsider 2020 11-inch iPad Pro Price Guide and 2020 12.9-inch iPad Pro Price Guide.
Closeout deals on Apple's 2018 iPad Pro are also available in the iPad Price Guide, with discounts of up to $200 off.
2020 11" iPad Pro deals

2020 iPad Pro design mockup sits behind a 2018 iPad Pro.
To make deciding easier, we've broken down our guide into different sections, based on which device you are currently using as you grapple with the decision to upgrade or not to upgrade.
I have an older iPad
If you have an older iPad, you likely fall into one of two camps -- your iPad is doing just fine but you're thinking about a feature update or your iPad is no longer powerful enough and showing signs of its age.For those with iPads that are doing just fine and are fulfilling your needs at least adequately -- you don't need to upgrade to the 2020 iPad Pro. The 2020 models of the Pros aren't all that different than the 2018 iPad Pro line, and if you weren't convinced by the 2018 models during the last two years the 2020 won't likely sway you any further. There's nothing wrong with an upgrade, especially if you just want something new, but the previous-gen 2018 iPad Pro on sale or an iPad Air may do you just fine.
Then there are those who do require an update from an older iPad. Those of you in this boat should have no qualms about jumping to the new iPad Pro. The only thing we'd recommend is to think about what you do with the tablet. If you are mainly consuming media, watching movies and TV, reading, social media, etc then the iPad Pro may be more tablet than you need. You'd be just as well off with the 2018 iPad Pro or the iPad Air 3 and can save yourself some cash in the process.
I have the 2017 iPad Pro

2018 iPad Pro (left) and the 2017 iPad Pro (right)
What are you waiting for? The new iPad Pro has all the brilliant redesigned features of the 2018 line plus even more. The 2018 was a great upgrade cycle for iPad Pro and if you held off on that for Apple to refine it and add any additional features then this is where you want to be.
Plus, the 2017 iPad Pro won't work with the Magic Keyboard and the likelihood of third-party models coming for a three-year-old design isn't high.
You are probably one who pushes the iPad but didn't want to upgrade after only a year. Now that it has been more than a year since the previous-generation dropped it is not a bad time at all to pull the trigger.
I have the 2019 iPad Air
Those who specifically are rocking the 2019 iPad Air, we'd recommend holding off. You just bought the tablet a year ago at which point you decided on the Air rather than the 2018 iPad Pro. If that was the case then, unless your work on iPad has substantially changed, there is no reason to shell out even more money to upgrade to the 2020 iPad Pro.If you are looking to boost your productivity, however, we'd recommend perhaps picking up one of the new Logitech keyboard cases that now integrate a full multi-touch trackpad.
I have the 2018 iPad Pro
This is the most interesting decision of them all. You have the 2018 iPad Pro and are on the fence about whether to jump ship to the new models. This happens to be exactly where we found ourselves to be as well.
The single 12MP wide-angle camera bump on the 2018 iPad Pro
The biggest hurdle is that the iPad Pro is Apple's most expensive tablet and shelling out between $800 and over $2000 is no small chunk of change. For that reason, we recommend most users with the 2018 iPad Pro hold off and don't bother upgrading to the 2020 iPad Pros.
There are differences between the two models -- we explored those extensively -- but they aren't going to be huge game-changers. Yes, graphics will be notably better. Wi-Fi 6 will be faster -- assuming you have Wi-Fi 6 routers in your home or office. And sure, the new camera and LiDAR will have benefits. But those together won't be enough to warrant the substantial amount of money required for the upgrade.
In this particular case, we'd say stay put, save yourself the money, and spend the $300 to $350 on the new Magic Keyboard when it ships in May to boost the functionality and features of your existing device.
Where we would say it would be worth upgrading is if you are doing anything very graphics-heavy, like editing huge photos or working with video. In this case, the new iPad Pro with its eight-core GPU will be beneficial. It also may be a good time to upgrade storage as well.

Editing images on the 2018 iPad Pro
When we picked up the 2018 iPad Pro, we didn't think we were going to keep it. We wanted to try it out before upgrading from our 2017 iPad Pro. But the redesign that the 2018 had was so good that we ended up sticking with it. Unfortunately, we only picked up the base 64GB of storage. As video and photo editors, that was a far cry from what we needed and we paid the price after only a month or two of use.
After a year and a half of painfully managing storage, we are eager to upgrade to a higher capacity and will also be thrilled with improved graphics, faster Wi-Fi, and even the U1 chip when it is eventually taken advantage of.
For those reasons, we upgraded our personal units to the latest model.
Deals on both 2020 iPad Pros and 2018 iPad Pros
Regardless of which iPad you currently have, if you decide to upgrade to the new iPad Pro you surely won't be disappointed. It is powerful, feature-rich, and iPadOS continues to bring countless new features to Apple's tablet computer.Discounts on Apple's new 2020 iPad Pro are already in effect, with the latest deals available in the AppleInsider 2020 11-inch iPad Pro Price Guide and 2020 12.9-inch iPad Pro Price Guide.
Closeout deals on Apple's 2018 iPad Pro are also available in the iPad Price Guide, with discounts of up to $200 off.
2020 11" iPad Pro deals
- 2020 11" iPad Pro (128GB, Wi-Fi): $749* ($50 off)
- 2020 11" iPad Pro (256GB, Wi-Fi): $844* ($55 off)
- 2020 11" iPad Pro (256GB, Wi-Fi + Cellular): $989* ($60 off)
- 2020 11" iPad Pro (512GB, Wi-Fi): $1,034* ($65 off)
*Price with $.01 shipping using promo code appleinsider. Plus, save $20 on AppleCare.
- 2020 12.9" iPad Pro (128GB, Wi-Fi): $939* ($60 off)
- 2020 12.9" iPad Pro (256GB, Wi-Fi): $1,034* ($65 off)
- 2020 12.9" iPad Pro (256GB, Wi-Fi + Cellular): $1,179* ($70 off)
- 2020 12.9" iPad Pro (1TB, Wi-Fi + Cellular): $1,564* ($85 off) - Manually spec out options to see special price
*Price with $.01 shipping using coupon code appleinsider. Plus, save $20 on AppleCare.
Comments
The first is the person that picked up the 11 inch 2018 iPad Pro and now wants the 12.9”.
The second is the rumor that there’s going to be another 2020 iPad Pro released later this year with a newer display and might also include an A13 cpu and more memory.
Please do your research before publishing. How could you miss that Logitech has already announced its Combo Touch keyboard that’s coming soon and will support the 2017 10.5 iPad Pro? It has almost every feature of the Magic Keyboard except the sky high price tag: it’s $149, less than half of what Apple is charging.
Wifi 6 is better, but my old routers give a mesh service, and have, long before mesh became a word people heard of. So far, even the best routers deliver worse service than my old Apple models. New WiFi 6 models have come out, but service generally is still worse than what I've been getting here for years, other than for the WiFi 6 spec itself. And they're very expensive. I don't mind that, but WiFi 6 will be even more difficult to serve in my house than the older versions. So this isn’t a no brainer.
later this year is our bi annual iPhone buying year, and the new phones also have WiFi 6. They have it this year too. I don't know why it’s not on the new MacBook Air. That seems strange. But I expect that within two years at the most, all Apple products will move to that, as will many other company’s products. I’d like to do it now, as my iPad will be here Wednesday, and I expect maybe sooner, as Apple billed me Friday. But i guess I’ll have to do more research.
I find the tab situation to be a strange one. People talk about how pages from tabs need to refresh with less memory. But i find that thats what i want. A lot of pages are updated anyway. If you dont get an immediate refresh, the you have to do it manually anyway. That happens with a lot of forums. If you don't force an update, the posts aren’t updated. On this site, sometimes they are, and sometimes they aren’t.
I do find it strange that they went with an A12Z chip and not an A13X, which is what I would have assumed.
Nope.
I want double the resolution.
I don't care about: memory, cameras.
Internally, I'm very pleased with the performance and coverage I get with my Ubiquiti WiFi setup (ac compliant) which is meshed with wired gigabit Ethernet backhaul and 3 PoE WiFi access points, 2 in-ceiling and 1 in-wall. Ubiquiti/Unifi has a very broad selection of access points to fit just about any scenario you can think of to give you WiFi coverage across your entire property, inside and out, and even distributed to multiple buildings on your property if that's what you need. It'll probably take Ubiquiti a while to get their mainstream, managed products moved to WiFi 6/ax due to the breadth of their product line, but it will happen.
Ubiquiti does have an integrated, meshed WiFi 6 router (AmpliFi Alien Mesh WiFi 6) but it's on the consumer side of their products and pricey. The bulk of their products are more of what I'd call "prosumer" networking components since the functional elements for a network (router, security gateway, switches, access points, management controller software, etc.) are separate, managed products. Setting up and managing a Unifi system is definitely more complex than anything you're doing with Apple's Extreme products. But they do give you access and control over every tweakable parameter that exists for network management and networked-device management, including the ability to setup a user-login-specific WiFi access portal like you'd find in a hotel, as opposed to a static guest network controlled only by the SSID.
I see the recent iPad models as a stop gap until 5G comes out and is truly operational and the new technology screen is available.