Apple has introduced the MacBook Neo, its most affordable laptop, which iFixit has identified as the most repairable MacBook in approximately fourteen years.
The development marks a significant shift in Apple’s hardware design philosophy, potentially reducing long-term ownership costs and addressing longstanding criticism from right-to-repair advocates. Repairability scores directly influence consumer purchasing decisions and secondary market values for electronics.
The battery represents the most substantial change, according to iFixit. The Neo’s battery sits in a tray secured with 18 screws, replacing the adhesive-based installation used in previous MacBook models. iFixit stated that “screws still beat adhesive every time” and noted the design change “sent cheers across the iFixit office.”
Additional repairability improvements include a flat disassembly tree, expanded Repair Assistant compatibility for replacement parts, and simplified display and keyboard replacement procedures. These changes reduce technical barriers for third-party repairs and independent servicing.
iFixit assigned the MacBook Neo a repairability score of 6 out of 10. The organization described this as “a strong score” for a MacBook, though limitations remain. Soldered RAM and storage components continue to restrict certain upgrade paths, preventing the device from achieving higher marks.





