Why the new Mac mini is the perfect home & family computer
The just-released Mac mini looks unexciting from the exterior with its years-old design -- but don't let that fool you. This unassuming Mac is a steal with surprising performance.
The new Mac mini comes with an M2 or M2 Pro processor
It's hard to complain much about the updated Mac mini. Apple delivered not one -- but two versions -- with either the M2 or the M2 Pro on the inside. The new version of the headless Mac comes with more powerful silicon, and a lower price tag to boot.
Apple dropped the Mac mini price on the entry-level model from $699 to $599, getting you an M2-equipped Mac mini with 8GB of ram and 256GB of SSD storage. On the education store, the price drops further to only $499.
Depending on your needs, the Mac mini may be the desktop Mac to own. Let's compare it to the iMac and the Mac Studio, ignoring the Mac Pro as it's in a league of its own.
You could opt for the entry-level 24-inch iMac that runs you $1,300 with an 8-core M1 with a 7-core GPU or for less than $600, you can have an 8-core M2 with a 10-core GPU. Less than half the price with better performance.
Alternatively, you could spend the same $1,300 but get a 10-core M2 Pro Mac mini that comes with a 16-core GPU and double the memory and storage.
If you can source your own monitor and peripherals, or already have ones you like, the new Mac mini is incredible value.
The Mac Studio can absolutely be outfitted to be more powerful than the highest-end Mac mini. But, if you were looking at an entry-level Mac Studio a week ago, the Mac mini with M2 Pro processor may be a better choice.
Recent benchmarks have shown that the 12-core M2 Pro outpaces the 10-core M1 Max. That means you can pick up the new 10-core M2 Pro Mac Mini for $1,300 while the M1 Max Mac Studio starts at $2000 -- a $700 savings with similar performance.
Spending another $300 gets you a 12-core M2 Pro Mac mini, still a $400 savings and now better performance. Mac Studio has more ports, but if you're comfortable with Ethernet, four Thunderbolt, HDMI, and two USB-A, the Mac mini wins out.
Plus the Mac mini has extra benefits the Mac Studio doesn't, such as support for 4K 240Hz and 8K displays.
This comparison is complex, though. We already ran through the Mac Mini versus Mac Studio specs on paper, and we'll revisit it when we have the hardware in-hand.
Readers can exclusively save $100 on the following retail configurations with promo code APINSIDER at Apple Authorized Reseller Adorama.
The new Mac mini comes with an M2 or M2 Pro processor
It's hard to complain much about the updated Mac mini. Apple delivered not one -- but two versions -- with either the M2 or the M2 Pro on the inside. The new version of the headless Mac comes with more powerful silicon, and a lower price tag to boot.
Apple dropped the Mac mini price on the entry-level model from $699 to $599, getting you an M2-equipped Mac mini with 8GB of ram and 256GB of SSD storage. On the education store, the price drops further to only $499.
Depending on your needs, the Mac mini may be the desktop Mac to own. Let's compare it to the iMac and the Mac Studio, ignoring the Mac Pro as it's in a league of its own.
M2 Mac mini compared to the 24-inch iMac with Apple Silicon
Apple's 24-inch iMac is tempting as an all-in-one design that includes everything you need from the keyboard and mouse to the display. If you can compromise on the accessories, Mac mini can be far more power for the price.You could opt for the entry-level 24-inch iMac that runs you $1,300 with an 8-core M1 with a 7-core GPU or for less than $600, you can have an 8-core M2 with a 10-core GPU. Less than half the price with better performance.
Alternatively, you could spend the same $1,300 but get a 10-core M2 Pro Mac mini that comes with a 16-core GPU and double the memory and storage.
If you can source your own monitor and peripherals, or already have ones you like, the new Mac mini is incredible value.
M2 Mac mini compared to Mac Studio
In the initial batch of M2 Mac mini reviews the performance was so solid some had already dubbed it the "Mac Studio Junior" and it's easy to see why.The Mac Studio can absolutely be outfitted to be more powerful than the highest-end Mac mini. But, if you were looking at an entry-level Mac Studio a week ago, the Mac mini with M2 Pro processor may be a better choice.
Recent benchmarks have shown that the 12-core M2 Pro outpaces the 10-core M1 Max. That means you can pick up the new 10-core M2 Pro Mac Mini for $1,300 while the M1 Max Mac Studio starts at $2000 -- a $700 savings with similar performance.
Spending another $300 gets you a 12-core M2 Pro Mac mini, still a $400 savings and now better performance. Mac Studio has more ports, but if you're comfortable with Ethernet, four Thunderbolt, HDMI, and two USB-A, the Mac mini wins out.
Plus the Mac mini has extra benefits the Mac Studio doesn't, such as support for 4K 240Hz and 8K displays.
This comparison is complex, though. We already ran through the Mac Mini versus Mac Studio specs on paper, and we'll revisit it when we have the hardware in-hand.
Exclusive deals available now
Apple's new Mac mini is already on sale, with prices dipping to as low as $549 in our M2 Mac mini Price Guide.Readers can exclusively save $100 on the following retail configurations with promo code APINSIDER at Apple Authorized Reseller Adorama.
M2 Mac mini markdowns
- M2 (8C CPU, 10C GPU), 8GB, 256GB: Reg. $599, now $549* ($50 off)
- M2 (8C CPU, 10C GPU), 8GB, 512GB: Reg. $799, now $699* ($100 off)
- M2 Pro (10C CPU, 16C GPU), 16GB, 512GB: Reg. $1,299, now $1,199* ($100 off)
*Price with coupon code APINSIDER.
Comments
The real insanity is that with the M2 I have to pay as much for adding 256 GB SSD as getting a 2 TB external HD! That is an 8:1 ratio
And why do I have to pay as much for adding 256 (256 to 512) as adding 512 (going from 412 to 1TB) !?
I agree it's insane, I wouldn't mind the soldered memory and storage as much if it were more reasonably priced. How much they charge for memory and storage upgrades is criminal. External Thunderbolt storage has a bandwidth cap, even a single NVMe 3.0 will be much faster. Move to PCIe 4.0 or 5.0 and there is no comparison.
I'm a certified Mac technician, I've seen the inside of the M1 mini. There is SO much empty space, you could fit 2x 2.5" drives inside and still have lots of air movement, much less having a few NVMe blades. The logic board & heatsink only takes about 20% of the interior volume, the rest is just air space from using the same enclosure from the last 13 years. It would be trivial for Apple to add that capability to the logic board, but they won't when they make as much as they do on storage upgrades.
The more interesting and valid use case for the new Mac mini is it's potential as a Mac Studio Junior -- there are probably many buyers for whom the Mac Studio form factor makes sense, but for whom even the base model is more than they need--now the new Mac mini offers similar power at a reduced price, minus some bells and whistles that likely aren't important to the Mini buyer.
First, let's consider that your now 10-year-old iMac "still works great" per your own description. You've had a decade of use and still going strong for a desktop that listed (standard model) at $1799. That's $180 per year or about 50 cents a day for a desktop that STILL does everything you need it to do well. How many of the cheaper Windows desktops you could have bought are still "working great" after ten years? A very under appreciated part of the Mac value proposition is that they CAN be used for a decade or longer -- you can choose to avoid upgrading if you wish because Apple machines last... and because of #2 below, which is equally important.
Second. let's consider that your 2013 iMac was able to run the latest and greatest Mac OS until Nov 2020 when Big Sur was released. For seven years the OS of your iMac was as current as any other Mac out there. You had seven years of new Mac OS releases for FREE. And even now, Apple continues to support Catalina on your 10-year-old machine with security updates. Again, how many of the cheaper Windows desktops you could have bought were supported with the latest Windows OS for free for that time. Here, let me help: None. How many are still getting security updates? In terms of support with the latest OS with the latest features, nothing matches the longevity of a Mac and you get that kind of support for free.
Third, where Apple used to lag behind in price/performance comparisons, that is no longer the case. Especially since the M-chip debuted, Apple is performance competitive with anything else at its price point.
And finally: even after years of use, if you've kept your Mac or Macbook in excellent condition, they still have resale value. Last year, I sold my 2015 Macbook 12" on Craiglist for $350. Back in 2017, I sold my 2009 iMac for $500. Show me a cheap Windows desktop or laptop that retains that kind of resale value after that many years. A key part of value retention is that a 6 or 7 year old Apple machine is able to run a very recent (if not the latest) Mac OS, and will still receive security updates from Apple.