Apple's Mac refresh includes universal drop in SSD upgrade prices
Beyond updating the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro, Apple on Tuesday also reduced the cost of SSD upgrades for all Macs, in some cases by as much as half.
For high-end 15-inch MacBook Pros, 1-, 2-, and 4-terabyte upgrades are down to $200, $600, and $1,400 respectively. The 4-terabyte option previously cost $2,800, more than many whole systems.
With the MacBook Air, Apple has removed a 1.5-terabyte configuration, narrowing selections to 256 gigabytes, 512 gigabytes, and 1 terabyte. The latter two choices are $200 and $400.
Similar price cuts have reached the iMac, iMac Pro, and Mac mini. On a 27-inch iMac for example, 256-gigabyte, 512-gigabyte, and 1-terabyte options are $100, $300, and $500.
Apple has often been criticized as overpricing SSD upgrades beyond what they cost from third-party vendors, especially versus equivalents on Windows PCs.
The company's MacBook Pro upgrades include faster processors, and omnipresent Touch Bar, Touch ID, T2, and True Tone technology. The MacBook Air now starts at $1,099 for most shoppers and uses True Tone for its display. The 12-inch MacBook has vanished from sale, although third-party authorized resellers have limited inventory at up to $200 off.
For the latest deals on Apple products, be sure to visit the AppleInsider Price Guides, which are updated throughout the day.
For high-end 15-inch MacBook Pros, 1-, 2-, and 4-terabyte upgrades are down to $200, $600, and $1,400 respectively. The 4-terabyte option previously cost $2,800, more than many whole systems.
With the MacBook Air, Apple has removed a 1.5-terabyte configuration, narrowing selections to 256 gigabytes, 512 gigabytes, and 1 terabyte. The latter two choices are $200 and $400.
Similar price cuts have reached the iMac, iMac Pro, and Mac mini. On a 27-inch iMac for example, 256-gigabyte, 512-gigabyte, and 1-terabyte options are $100, $300, and $500.
Apple has often been criticized as overpricing SSD upgrades beyond what they cost from third-party vendors, especially versus equivalents on Windows PCs.
The company's MacBook Pro upgrades include faster processors, and omnipresent Touch Bar, Touch ID, T2, and True Tone technology. The MacBook Air now starts at $1,099 for most shoppers and uses True Tone for its display. The 12-inch MacBook has vanished from sale, although third-party authorized resellers have limited inventory at up to $200 off.
For the latest deals on Apple products, be sure to visit the AppleInsider Price Guides, which are updated throughout the day.
Comments
it’s a serious question. I know you can send it back if a new model comes out in two weeks after purchase. I wonder if it applies also to price reductions.
It’s about time they started caring about the Mac again, perhaps they’ll manage to keep my business after all.
2) Why ask here instead of contacting Apple about getting a refund? Call them up and politely ask. If they say no then tell them you'll return it and but it again and that you'd rather make it easier for all parties. I've never had an issue with a price reduction a week after purchase from any company.
iMac 27" SSD low end: 256 = $100, 512 = 300, 1TB = 500
iMac 27" SSD mid: 256 = $100, 512 = 300, 1TB = 500
iMac 27" SSD high: 512 = 100, 1 TB = 300, 2TB = 700
128 -> 256 => +$200
256 -> 512 => +$200
512 -> 1TB => +$200
So the author started from the 256 GB "model" and you're starting from the 128 GB "model".
Now do RAM!
High-end SSDs cost $170-300/TB (for drives that are even faster than Apple's).