Apple to skip M6 Pro and Max chips, fast-track AI-focused M7 lineup for premium Macs

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Apple is preparing a major shift in its Mac silicon roadmap. The company plans to release only a base M6 chip while skipping Pro and Max variants entirely, instead jumping straight to an AI-focused M7 lineup. This marks the first time Apple won't introduce Pro and Max chips in a generation since launching its custom silicon in 2020.

Apple Breaks Pattern with Mac Silicon Roadmap

Apple is preparing a significant departure from its chip development strategy, according to a Bloomberg report by Mark Gurman.

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The company, currently shipping its M5 generation, plans to introduce only the base M6 processor for entry-level Macs while skipping the M6 Pro and M6 Max variants entirely. This represents the first time Apple introduces only the base chip in a new M-series generation after releasing Pro and Max variants with every family from M1 through M5.

The Mac silicon roadmap shift aims to fast-track technologies originally planned for later releases and meet growing demand for on-device AI capabilities and increasingly graphics-intensive software.

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Apple may skip M6 Pro and Max chips to accelerate the arrival of more advanced AI processing in its premium Mac lineup, a move that signals Apple's strategic shift toward AI as a core competitive priority.

M6 Chip Details and Performance Upgrades

Apple has reportedly been testing the M6 processor, internally known as Komodo (H18G), in a refreshed entry-level MacBook Pro with the internal codename J804.

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The base M6 chip is expected to feature improvements to CPU performance, graphics, AI processing and memory architecture.

Source: Digit

Source: Digit

The M6 is expected to increase memory bandwidth to around 200GB/s, up from approximately 153GB/s on the M5.

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This higher bandwidth is intended to improve advanced AI workloads, video editing, model training and high-resolution graphics rendering. The chip will also feature a redesigned GPU with up to 12 graphics cores, compared with up to 10 on the M5, along with an upgraded Neural Engine for AI processing and enhanced video encoding and decoding capabilities.

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AI-Focused M7 Lineup Timeline and Specifications

Following the launch of the base M6 chip, Apple is reportedly planning a rapid transition to the M7 generation, which is designed around more advanced on-device AI processing while also improving computing and graphics performance.

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The AI-focused M7 lineup will include the M7 Pro, M7 Max and M7 Ultra variants, with the higher-end chips internally referred to as the Andros family.

The base Apple M7 chip could debut as early as the first half of next year, followed by the M7 Pro and M7 Max by the end of 2027.

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The M7 Ultra is expected in 2028 for the highest-end Mac Studio models. The base M7 processor is expected to support approximately 240GB/s of memory bandwidth, representing another substantial increase over the M6.

Supply Challenges and Industry Impact

Apple still plans to introduce the M5 Ultra, internally codenamed Sotra D (H17D), in a new Mac Studio (codenamed J775) that was postponed because of supply and cost challenges.

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The chip is expected to feature around 36 CPU cores, 80 GPU cores and support for up to 768GB of unified memory during testing, though component shortages could affect final memory configurations.

Industry-wide chip shortages have created significant pressure on Apple's operations. These supply constraints have increased costs, squeezed margins, affected supply, caused shipment delays and prompted Apple to reassess parts of its product roadmap. The impact has been visible in pricing, with Apple raising Mac and iPad prices globally this week. In India, the Mac mini with the M4 chip now costs Rs 82,900, up from Rs 59,900, while the MacBook Air M5 has risen from Rs 1,20,900 to Rs 1,49,900.

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Outgoing CEO Tim Cook has described the global memory shortage as "a hundred-year flood."

Leadership and Custom Silicon Development

Apple's custom silicon development is led by Johny Srouji, who was promoted to Chief Hardware Officer as part of John Ternus' transition to Chief Executive Officer.

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Srouji now oversees hardware engineering for Macs, iPhones, iPads, Apple Watch and other Apple devices. This custom silicon strategy enables closer integration between Apple's chips, hardware and software, giving the company more control over performance optimization and AI-focused chips development.

Beyond its Mac roadmap, Apple is reportedly preparing next-generation iPhone processors based on a 2-nanometer manufacturing process, new silicon for its foldable iPhone expected this year, and processors planned for the company's 20th anniversary iPhone models in 2027.

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The accelerated timeline for AI capabilities suggests Apple recognizes the competitive urgency of delivering sophisticated on-device AI to maintain its position against rivals who are rapidly advancing their own AI hardware and software ecosystems.

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