Apple’s M6 Chip Is Reportedly Coming This Fall – Here’s What Might Launch With It

TSMC 2nm silicon could power a redesigned Mac lineup as early as fall, with a touchscreen MacBook Ultra slipping to 2027

Alex Barrientos Avatar
Alex Barrientos Avatar

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Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Apple’s M6 Pro and Max chips leverage TSMC’s 2nm process for bigger efficiency gains.
  • Rumored MacBook Ultra introduces OLED display, touchscreen, and cellular connectivity above $3,500.
  • RAM shortages push the MacBook Ultra launch to early 2027, extending the wait significantly.

The familiar upgrade dilemma just got sharper. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman believes Apple’s M6 chip is arriving “sooner than people anticipate…in the near future,” according to 9to5Mac. Apple has confirmed nothing. But the rumor mill is spinning hard enough to warrant attention — especially because the M6 Pro and Max variants are reportedly built on custom silicon from TSMC’s 2nm process, a node jump that could deliver bigger-than-usual leaps in efficiency and performance.

The Likely First-Wave Machines

Macs that skipped M5 are the obvious candidates for an early M6 refresh.

Several Macs never got the M5 treatment. The iMac, Mac mini, and Mac Studio all sit on older silicon, making them prime candidates for a fall M6 debut, according to 9to5Mac’s rumor roundup. Community speculation frequently points to Mac Studio as the logical showcase — it already occupies premium territory where a new chip makes the strongest marketing case. Meanwhile, the real headline-grabber is a rumored MacBook Ultra, reportedly positioned above the current MacBook Pro lineup. Here’s what’s supposedly in the package:

  • OLED display with a hole-punch Dynamic Island camera
  • Touchscreen support — a first for any Mac
  • Thinner chassis running M6 Pro or M6 Max on TSMC’s 2nm process
  • Built-in cellular via Apple’s C-series modem
  • Speculated pricing north of $3,500, per Gadget Flow — though that’s conjecture, not confirmation

The Timeline Keeps Sliding

A global memory shortage has pushed the flagship redesign toward early 2027.

That OLED MacBook Ultra was originally pegged for late 2026. Not anymore. Both Gurman and analyst Ming-Chi Kuo now point toward early 2027 as more realistic, with a global RAM shortage acting as the bottleneck, according to MacRumors and Macworld. Like a hyped album that keeps getting pushed back — fans refreshing their feeds while the release date quietly drifts — the anticipation builds, but the finish line keeps moving.

Previous Apple Silicon node transitions delivered steady but modest gains. The 2nm jump is expected to be more pronounced, particularly for battery life and on-device AI workloads. No benchmarks exist yet, so treat performance expectations accordingly. The MacBook Air with M6 trails even further behind — MacRumors puts that update around March 2027.

The Buy-or-Wait Calculus

Upgrade timing hinges entirely on which Mac is on the wish list.

Running M2 or older hardware? A fall M6 refresh in the Mac mini or iMac could justify the wait. If the OLED MacBook Ultra is the goal, patience remains the only realistic strategy — early 2027 at the soonest. After years of insisting fingers had no business touching a Mac screen, Apple is reportedly about to let you smudge away.

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