MacBook Air 2018 Review: Apple's most popular Mac gets an impactful upgrade

Posted:
in Current Mac Hardware edited January 2021
Apple has repeatedly described the MacBook Air as the most popular Mac in its lineup, with years of neglect leaving some intimidatingly large shoes for the new 2018 upgrade to fill. After spending the last several days using it as our daily driver, we're here with our review of Apple's latest portable Mac.

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In the box

First, you have the new USB-C power cable as well as a 30W power brick. That is a tick up from the normal 29W USB-C power brick that Apple used to sell.

2018 Space Gray MacBook Air box
2018 Space Gray MacBook Air box


We then have the usual smattering of getting started guides and the always-sought-after Apple stickers. Instead of the usual white matte stickers, we are treated to color matched stickers that go with the specific finish on the Air. We got Space Gray stickers with ours, while others will get gold ones with the gold and silver with the silver.

Getting started guide, USB-C cable, 30W power adapter, Space Gray stickers
Getting started guide, USB-C cable, 30W power adapter, Space Gray stickers

What you get






The 13.3-inch display has a native resolution of 2,560-by-1,600 pixels, with scaled resolutions of 1680 x 1050, 1440 x 900, and 1024 x 640. With the Intel UHD Graphics 617, the new MacBook Air can support one external display with 5120 x 2880 resolution at up to 60Hz or to two external displays with 4096 x 2304 resolution at up to 60Hz over Thunderbolt 3.

MacBook Air trackpad
MacBook Air trackpad


An updated third-generation Butterfly keyboard is above a 20-percent larger Force Touch trackpad.

There's no Touch Bar, but a Touch ID sensor does reside to the right of the physical function keys.

MacBook Air Touch ID
MacBook Air Touch ID


Despite adding these new features, the new MacBook Air still winds up with 17 percent less volume than the previous generation, weighing only 2.75 pounds.

Our tested configuration has the eighth-generation Core i5-8210Y at a base frequency of 1.6GHz, with 128GB of storage, and 8GB of RAM.

Hardware

The new MacBook Air definitely got a big upgrade on the exterior hardware yet it still feels very familiar. It now looks very much in line with the rest of Apple's lineup, between the 12-inch Retina MacBook and the MacBook Pros.

MacBook Air Headphone jack
MacBook Air headphone jack


The exterior still has a similar wedge-shaped design to previous model, though of course there are three different finishes now instead of just one. The headphone jack has survived with the Air retaining one even have it has been purged from the iPhone and iPad Pro.

Rather than getting limited to a single USB-C port -- such as on the MacBook -- you now can connect multiple, more powerful accessories such as an external GPU with a pair of high-speed Thunderbolt 3 ports.

MacBook Air Thunderbolt 3 ports
MacBook Air Thunderbolt 3 ports


When we compared the display of the new MacBook Air to our 15-inch 2017 MacBook Pro, they both looked pretty solid, but we noticed at least one difference -- the new Air doesn't get quite as bright. When we checked out the specs page, Apple outlines the newest Pros can reach up to 500 nits of brightness, while the new Airs only max out at 300. This would be more noticeable for anyone working outside, but isn't a big deal in an office environment, or even a bright room.

It is also worth noting that while the resolution is the same as the 13-inch MacBook Pro, it doesn't contain True Tone, which we were a fan of in our review.

The third-generation butterfly keyboard is the same as we saw on the latest MacBook Pros. That means it (somewhat) fixes the reliability issues and is quieter. That certainly seems to be the case here, with no noticeable difference in typing performance.

As someone who types a a lot, I don't mind Apple's keyboard. In fact, I'd go as far as to say I actually like them. They are quick, responsive (when not sticking), and the 3rd gen one is noticeably quieter than my late-2016 MacBook Pro that sound loud in comparison.

MacBook Air Mojave
MacBook Air in macOS Mojave Dark Mode


So much got upgraded here, but the one area that doesn't seem to have seen much of a change is the speakers. They seem about as good as they ever were, which is to say about in the middle of the road. There is a big difference between them and the MacBook Pros, especially when it comes to the bass output.

This is understandable with such a limited amount of space, but we weren't blown away by the sound reproduction like we were with the 2018 MacBook Pro.

The benchmarks

Our findings line up with the preliminary benchmarks that had leaked online soon after the announcement. In our 1.6GHz machine, we averaged 4362 and 7858 on our single-core and multi-core tests respectively.

Those are decent results for the low-power 7W Amber Lake Intel chipset, though not hugely elevated over the 2017 MacBook Air with the 1.8GHz Broadwell Intel chip which earned a single-core score of 3335 and a multi-core score of 6119.

It also clocks in a bit above the Core m chip found inside the 2017 12-inch Retina MacBook. The 1.4GHz Retina MacBook earned 3925 and 7567 on their single and multi-core tests.

Apple's previous MacBook Airs used Intel chips with a 15W thermal design power, which ran much hotter than this year's 7W. There was some warranted concern on how the new chip would perform, but it does appear to be showing some improvements.

Apple did include a single fan to help that processor cool, and we'll be looking at the effects of any thermal throttling on long-term processing jobs at a later date.

MacBook Air logo
MacBook Air logo


Looking at Cinebench R15, we averaged around 30 fps on the OpenGL test and 229 on the CPU. This isn't too surprising as we knew graphics were going to be a weak spot on the Air. In fact, as we went to run the test, we got the spinning pinwheel for several seconds as soon as we clicked the button to kick it off.

Of course, these are just benchmarks, and not necessarily something that you can easily infer day-to-day performance from.

Real world performance

MacBook Air has never been designed to be a powerhouse of a machine. It has always packed with just enough computing power to easily handle most real-world use cases its users will throw at it. Other than graphics-heavy workloads, the MacBook Air will be just fine.

We've spent several days now using it for all our common tasks from editing photos in Affinity Photo, taking notes in Bear, and editing some videos within Final Cut Pro. For the most part, as expected, all of these tasks were no issue for the new Air.

Also as you might expect, there was some slowdown as the machine chewed on gigantic 44MP RAW images into Affinity Photo. But, smaller JPEGs or anything shot on our iPhones were processed easily, and without delay.

When we took to FCP, we noticed that with actual editing of simple 4K video, there wasn't much issue. Final Cut kept up with as we worked, adding a few effects, titles, and more.

But, things changed when we went to export, and there is a huge difference between our 2016 MacBook Pro and the MacBook Air -- but as long as you're patient, it works fine. That is certainly great to see, and should people's minds to ease if they are wondering if they can use FCPX on the Air at all.

So close...

MacBook Air is an enticing machine. It fits squarely between the MacBook and the MacBook Pro, with tradeoffs of course.

If you opted for the MacBook with a Retina screen instead, you'd be getting a much less powerful machine, no Touch ID, and a single USB-C rather than dual Thunderbolt 3. However, it is smaller and cheaper than the Air.

On the other end of the scale, if you chose the MacBook Pro then that's more expensive and heavier, but it comes packed with two more Thunderbolt 3 ports and better performance.

Score: 4 out of 5. So close to greatness, but let down a bit by the lack of graphical oomph.

How to save up to $208 on preorders

Apple's 2018 MacBook Air is available for preorder from Apple authorized reseller Adorama with no sales tax collected on orders shipped outside New York and New Jersey -- plus no interest financing when paid in full within 12 months with the Adorama Credit Card. Since Adorama is an Apple authorized reseller, you can rest assured these are the same factory sealed systems you would find at the Apple Store. Orders are shipped on a first come, first served basis and your card will not be charged until your MacBook Air is ready to ship.

For a full list of deals and product availability across multiple Apple authorized resellers, be sure to check out our 2018 MacBook Air Price Guide.

2018 13-inch MacBook Air preorders

  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 128GB) Space Gray | MRE82LL/A
    On sale for $1,149.00 @MacMall
    ($50 off + free shipping)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 128GB) Space Gray
    Buy for $1,199.00
    ($95 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 128GB) Silver
    Buy for $1,199.00
    ($95 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 128GB) Gold
    Buy for $1,199.00
    ($95 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 256GB) Space Gray
    Buy for $1,399.00
    ($112 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 256GB) Silver
    Buy for $1,399.00
    ($112 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 256GB) Gold
    Buy for $1,399.00
    ($112 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 512GB) Space Gray
    Buy for $1,599.00
    ($128 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 512GB) Silver
    Buy for $1,599.00
    ($128 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 512GB) Gold
    Buy for $1,599.00
    ($128 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 1.5TB) Space Gray
    Buy for $2,399.00
    ($192 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 1.5TB) Silver
    Buy for $2,399.00
    ($192 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 8GB 1.5TB) Gold
    Buy for $2,399.00
    ($192 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 128GB) Space Gray
    Buy for $1,399.00
    ($112 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 128GB) Silver
    Buy for $1,399.00
    ($112 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 128GB) Gold
    Buy for $1,399.00
    ($112 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 256GB) Space Gray
    Buy for $1,599.00
    ($128 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 256GB) Silver
    Buy for $1,599.00
    ($128 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 256GB) Gold
    Buy for $1,599.00
    ($128 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 512GB) Space Gray
    Buy for $1,799.00
    ($144 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 512GB) Silver
    Buy for $1,799.00
    ($144 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 512GB) Gold
    Buy for $1,799.00
    ($144 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 1.5TB) Space Gray
    Buy for $2,599.00
    ($208 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 1.5TB) Silver
    Buy for $2,599.00
    ($208 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
  • 13" Air (1.6GHz 16GB 1.5TB) Gold
    Buy for $2,599.00
    ($208 off in tax outside NY & NJ & 0% financing*)
    *Adorama will not collect sales tax on orders shipped outside NY & NJ*. System qualifies for no interest when paid in full within 12 months with the Adorama Credit Card.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 80
    asciiascii Posts: 5,936member
    I am interested in whether a fast eGPU gets bottlenecked by the 7W processor. i.e. if you install the same game on the new MBA and on a MBP, and use the same eGPU, does the MBA get a lot less fps?
    Avieshek
  • Reply 2 of 80
    MacBook Air is an enticing machine. It fits squarely between the MacBook and the MacBook Pro, with tradeoffs of course. 

    But at the same price point of $1,299, the tradeoffs come in the form of computing power, size, weight and battery life. For many, the Pro will be the better investment with better CPU which almost guarantees longevity. 
    chasmwilliamlondonAvieshek
  • Reply 3 of 80
    MplsPMplsP Posts: 3,911member
    Laptops have always been about compromises. I admittedly don’t have a good gauge on this, but I suspect that the vast majority of people don’t need the ‘graphical oomph’ that the Pros provide. 

    I got a 2011 MacBook Air that is still running strong and works perfectly well for what many people use computers for - email, word processing, spreadsheets and web browsing. I finally upgraded last year to a 15” pro, mainly because I needed a better screen. My big comlaint with my new pro is the keyboard. If the new Air has a better keyboard it will likely be the perfect machine for a lot of people. 
    StrangeDaysflashfan207
  • Reply 4 of 80
    wood1208wood1208 Posts: 2,905member
    Focus of debate for the new Macbook air should be, what user segments it can or can not serve ? How far the performance of new air can address the daily computing needs of which user segment.
    chasm
  • Reply 5 of 80
    tipootipoo Posts: 1,141member
    If the Nontouchbar got an update any time soon to T2 and Butterfly 3 alone, it would still be my pick over this. Not much price difference, P3, 500 nits, Iris Plus, higher wattage CPU, and the battery life on the new Air isn't as far ahead as the old Air was. 

    If it got a quad core at the same time, it would runaway be the better choice, but it may have to give up Iris Plus for that this Intel generation. 
    bigpicswilliamlondon
  • Reply 6 of 80
    tipootipoo Posts: 1,141member
    ascii said:
    I am interested in whether a fast eGPU gets bottlenecked by the 7W processor. i.e. if you install the same game on the new MBA and on a MBP, and use the same eGPU, does the MBA get a lot less fps?


    Sure it would, you can already see this with the 13 vs 15 CPUs, and the Pro 13 is a higher bar not to bottleneck the GPU with four cores and higher clocks. Depends on the task/title of course, but a 7W CPU will certainly bottleneck modern mid-high end GPUs a fair bit. 

    https://barefeats.com/macbook-pro-13in-2018-with-egpu.html




    edited November 2018 asciibb-15techprod1gy
  • Reply 7 of 80
    asciiascii Posts: 5,936member
    tipoo said:
    ascii said:
    I am interested in whether a fast eGPU gets bottlenecked by the 7W processor. i.e. if you install the same game on the new MBA and on a MBP, and use the same eGPU, does the MBA get a lot less fps?


    Sure it would, you can already see this with the 13 vs 15 CPUs, and the 13 is a higher bar not to bottleneck the GPU. Depends on the task/title of course. 

    https://barefeats.com/macbook-pro-13in-2018-with-egpu.html




    Thanks, I should have thought of barefeats!
  • Reply 8 of 80
    Can you also point to reliable docks? Fancy USB-C is powerful, but so far very few accessories work reliably.
  • Reply 9 of 80
    wood1208wood1208 Posts: 2,905member
    The price of the new Macbook Air is already set so the focus of debate for the new Macbook air should be, what user segments it can or can not serve ? How far the performance of new air can address the daily computing needs of which user segment like college students, small businesses, enterprise users,etc
  • Reply 10 of 80
    canukstormcanukstorm Posts: 2,695member
    wood1208 said:
    The price of the new Macbook Air is already set so the focus of debate for the new Macbook air should be, what user segments it can or can not serve ? How far the performance of new air can address the daily computing needs of which user segment like college students, small businesses, enterprise users,etc
    This is a great machine for college students and business users but I would upgrade to 16GB RAM for future-proofing.
    christopher126chasmflashfan207
  • Reply 11 of 80
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,718member
    I have one being delivered tomorrow.  Ideal for vacations such as cruises.
    edited November 2018 bb-15williamlondon
  • Reply 12 of 80
    linkmanlinkman Posts: 1,035member
    Looks like a great machine -- I just wish it also came in a 15" model. The MBP is overkill for my needs (and my wallet) except for the screen real estate. It's such a big jump in price to go from an Apple 13" to 15" laptop right now.
    lorin schultz
  • Reply 13 of 80
    Mike WuertheleMike Wuerthele Posts: 6,858administrator
    Can you also point to reliable docks? Fancy USB-C is powerful, but so far very few accessories work reliably.
    We don't recommend most USB 3.1 type C docks. Thunderbolt, on the other hand, we do.

    bigpicswozwoz
  • Reply 14 of 80
    DuhSesameDuhSesame Posts: 1,278member
    Can you also point to reliable docks? Fancy USB-C is powerful, but so far very few accessories work reliably.
    We don't recommend most USB 3.1 type C docks. Thunderbolt, on the other hand, we do.

    Is the fan audible on the new MacBook Air, especially when you push it hard?
  • Reply 15 of 80
    Mike WuertheleMike Wuerthele Posts: 6,858administrator
    DuhSesame said:
    Can you also point to reliable docks? Fancy USB-C is powerful, but so far very few accessories work reliably.
    We don't recommend most USB 3.1 type C docks. Thunderbolt, on the other hand, we do.

    Is the fan audible on the new MacBook Air, especially when you push it hard?
    Not yet under pretty heavy load, nor on the mini. We haven't really shoved either ridiculously hard yet, but we will later in the week.
  • Reply 16 of 80
    DuhSesameDuhSesame Posts: 1,278member
    DuhSesame said:
    Can you also point to reliable docks? Fancy USB-C is powerful, but so far very few accessories work reliably.
    We don't recommend most USB 3.1 type C docks. Thunderbolt, on the other hand, we do.

    Is the fan audible on the new MacBook Air, especially when you push it hard?
    Not yet under pretty heavy load, nor on the mini. We haven't really shoved either ridiculously hard yet, but we will later in the week.
    Sounds nice.  Are speakers any better than the 12” MacBook?
  • Reply 17 of 80
    Mike WuertheleMike Wuerthele Posts: 6,858administrator
    DuhSesame said:
    DuhSesame said:
    Can you also point to reliable docks? Fancy USB-C is powerful, but so far very few accessories work reliably.
    We don't recommend most USB 3.1 type C docks. Thunderbolt, on the other hand, we do.

    Is the fan audible on the new MacBook Air, especially when you push it hard?
    Not yet under pretty heavy load, nor on the mini. We haven't really shoved either ridiculously hard yet, but we will later in the week.
    Sounds nice.  Are speakers any better than the 12” MacBook?
    They are about the same.
  • Reply 18 of 80
    entropysentropys Posts: 4,152member
    wood1208 said:
    Focus of debate for the new Macbook air should be, what user segments it can or can not serve ? How far the performance of new air can address the daily computing needs of which user segment.
    The old MBA dominated personal high school computer choice back in the day. The new model will be great for the classroom. Not sure about after hours though. Should have had the “u” series processor in dual core config to compete with low end XPS and Spectres. But Apple didn’t want to threaten MBP sales, and it would have made the rMB look really bad as an option.
    bigpics
  • Reply 19 of 80
    DuhSesameDuhSesame Posts: 1,278member
    entropys said:
    wood1208 said:
    Focus of debate for the new Macbook air should be, what user segments it can or can not serve ? How far the performance of new air can address the daily computing needs of which user segment.
    The old MBA dominated personal high school computer choice back in the day. The new model will be great for the classroom. Not sure about after hours though. Should have had the “u” series processor in dual core config to compete with low end XPS and Spectres. But Apple didn’t want to threaten MBP sales, and it would have made the rMB look really bad as an option.
    It trades performance with near-silent operation and much longer battery life, both are really competitive characterstics on the market.
    edited November 2018 canukstormwilliamlondon
  • Reply 20 of 80
    canukstormcanukstorm Posts: 2,695member
    DuhSesame said:
    entropys said:
    wood1208 said:
    Focus of debate for the new Macbook air should be, what user segments it can or can not serve ? How far the performance of new air can address the daily computing needs of which user segment.
    The old MBA dominated personal high school computer choice back in the day. The new model will be great for the classroom. Not sure about after hours though. Should have had the “u” series processor in dual core config to compete with low end XPS and Spectres. But Apple didn’t want to threaten MBP sales, and it would have made the rMB look really bad as an option.
    It trades performance with near-silent operation and much longer battery life, both are really competitive characterstics on the market.
    And the new Retina MBA isn't even that slow

    http://www.fcp.co/final-cut-pro/articles/2125-can-you-edit-4k-video-on-a-new-macbook-air
    edited November 2018 williamlondon
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