Apple 13.3"

★★★★☆ 3.7 (24)
CPU Intel 8th Generation Core i5 Not provided
RAM 8 GB
Storage 512 GB
Screen 13.3" 2560x1600
GPU Intel Iris Plus Graphics 655
OS Mac OS
Weight 1.4 kg
Apple 13.3" laptop
55 Pontuação Geral
Preço £ 0
Nenhuma oferta disponível

Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

A refurbished 13-inch MacBook Pro for $500 sounds tempting, but the old Intel CPU and just 8GB of RAM hold it back hard. The Retina display and build are still great, yet a used M1 MacBook Air at a similar price offers way more power and battery life. Only buy this if macOS with Boot Camp is a must.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Gorgeous Retina display with True Tone that's easy on the eyes. 96th
  • Top-tier reliability and a compact, solid aluminum chassis. 91th
  • Touch Bar and Touch ID add convenience if you actually use them. 79th
  • Weighs just over 3 pounds, a breeze to carry all day.

Cons

  • 8GB of soldered RAM chokes under any serious workload.
  • Aging Intel chip means fans spin up loud even on moderate tasks.
  • Four Thunderbolt 3 ports and nothing else, dongles are mandatory.
  • Refurb battery may fall well short of Apple's 10-hour promise.

What owners think

The Word on the Street

3.7/5 (24 reviews)
👍 Many owners love the bright, accurate Retina display and sturdy build quality that still feels premium.
👎 A common complaint is the lack of USB-A ports; people get tired of carrying adapters everywhere.
👎 Battery life in real use often disappoints, with several reports of needing a midday charge despite light tasks.

Como a opinião dos donos mudou ao longo do tempo

Exclusivo

Com base em quando os clientes realmente escreveram suas avaliações — para ver se os elogios iniciais se mantiveram.

A opinião dos donos esfriou desde o lançamento
1★2★3★4★5★Q3 '23: 2.0★ · 1 avaliaçãoQ4 '23: 5.0★ · 1 avaliaçãoQ1 '24: 3.7★ · 7 avaliaçõesQ2 '24: 3.8★ · 4 avaliaçõesQ3 '24: 4.2★ · 5 avaliaçõesQ4 '24: 5.0★ · 1 avaliaçãoQ1 '25: 4.3★ · 3 avaliaçõesQ2 '25: 3.7★ · 3 avaliaçõesQ3 '25: 4.0★ · 1 avaliaçãoQ4 '25: 4.0★ · 2 avaliaçõesQ1 '26: 2.3★ · 3 avaliaçõesQ2 '26: 1.0★ · 1 avaliação117451331231Q3 '23Q4 '23Q1 '24Q2 '24Q3 '24Q4 '24Q1 '25Q2 '25Q3 '25Q4 '25Q1 '26Q2 '26
Avaliação médiaSatisfeitos (4-5★)Insatisfeitos (1-2★)Altura da barra = número de avaliações

Com base em 32 avaliações de clientes datadas, agrupadas por trimestre civil. A análise por período está em inglês.

The proof

Performance

In our rundown, the CPU falls well below average, and the 8GB of LPDDR3 RAM is among the worst we've seen in this class. Real-world, that means it handles light office work without complaint, but multitasking gets messy quickly. The integrated Iris Plus 655 graphics sit right in the middle of the pack, fine for streaming video but a non-starter for gaming or even modest video editing. Storage speeds are okay thanks to that 512GB SSD, but the read/write numbers aren't going to impress anyone who's used a modern NVMe drive.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 40.7
GPU 51
RAM 5.4
Ports 52.4
Screen 78.9
Portability 91.4
Storage 39
Reliability 96.3
Social Proof 39.3

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

Frequency 2.3 GHz

Graphics

GPU Intel Iris Plus Graphics 655
Type discrete

Memory & Storage

RAM 8 GB
RAM Generation LPDDR3
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type SSD

Display

Size 13.3"
Resolution 2560 (QHD)

Connectivity

USB Ports 4
Thunderbolt 4x Thunderbolt
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 5

Physical

Weight 1.4 kg / 3.0 lbs
OS Mac OS

vs Competition

Our database stacks it against modern peers like the ASUS ProArt PX13, MSI Prestige, Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro, Lenovo ThinkPad P14s, and HP ZBook Ultra G1a. Those laptops run circles around this old Intel chip in raw performance and offer more RAM, better screens, and modern port layouts. They do cost a lot more new, but even a $500 new Windows laptop today typically pairs a recent Ryzen or 12th-gen Intel CPU with 16GB of RAM, leaving this MacBook in the dust. The only edge here is the macOS experience and that premium aluminum unibody.

Spec Apple 13.3" ASUS ROG Zephyrus GA403WW-G14.R95080 Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 3 P16 Gen 3 MSI Prestige PRE13EVOA2088 Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro NP940XHA-KG3US HP OmniBook X Flip 14-fk0033dx
CPU Intel 8th Generation Core i5 Not provided AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX Intel Core Ultra 7 258V Intel Core Ultra 7 256V AMD Ryzen AI 7 350
RAM (GB) 8 32 128 32 32 24
Storage (GB) 512 2000 4096 1000 1024 1024
Screen 13.3" 2560x1600 14" 2880x1800 16" 3200x2000 13.3" 2880x1800 14" 2880x1800 14" 1920x1200
GPU Intel Iris Plus Graphics 655 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 NVIDIA RTX PRO 5000 Blackwell Laptop GPU 24GB GDDR7 Intel Arc Intel Arc AMD Radeon 860M
OS Mac OS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home
Weight (kg) 1.4 1.6 2.5 1 1.2 1.4
Battery (Wh) - - 100 - 15 -
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortScreenCompactStorageReliabilitySocial Proof
Apple 13.3" 40.7515.452.478.991.43996.339.3
ASUS ROG Zephyrus GA403WW-G14.R95080 Compare 86.491.492.266.595.372.79058.397.5
Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 3 P16 Gen 3 Compare 96.789.299.799.597.110.898.778.688.6
MSI Prestige PRE13EVOA2088 Compare 63.76481.282.89095.373.858.385.3
Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro NP940XHA-KG3US Compare 66.96481.266.594.885.581.478.696.3
HP OmniBook X Flip 14-fk0033dx Compare 74.960.28482.871.777.569.431.996.3

Price

Value & Pricing

At $500, this MacBook Pro sits in a weird spot. A clean used M1 MacBook Air often goes for about the same price and absolutely demolishes it in speed, battery life, and thermals. The only real reason to pick this Intel model is if you rely on Boot Camp for Windows or need legacy macOS software. Otherwise, that price buys you a much more capable Windows ultrabook with a newer processor and double the RAM. Value feels shaky.

Read more

Overview

This is a Geek Squad Certified Refurbished 13-inch MacBook Pro from the Intel days, priced at $500. It packs a crisp 2560x1600 Retina display, a Touch Bar with Touch ID, and that classic Apple build quality that still feels premium. But under the hood, the 8th-gen quad-core i5 and just 8GB of RAM tell a story of a machine that's getting long in the tooth.

For the basics, writing, browsing, streaming, it's competent and snappy enough. But the moment you push it with a dozen tabs, a big spreadsheet, or any app that asks more of the GPU, the fan kicks in and performance tumbles. You're also living that full dongle life: four Thunderbolt 3 ports are fast but won't accept a standard USB-A plug without an adapter.

Common Questions

Q: Can this MacBook handle programming or running Xcode?

It works for light coding and simple Xcode projects, but the 8GB RAM makes virtual machines and large compiles a real headache.

Q: Does it support external 4K monitors?

Yes, the Thunderbolt 3 ports can drive up to two 4K displays at 60Hz, but you'll need USB-C to DisplayPort or HDMI adapters.

Q: Is the battery replaceable if it's worn out?

Apple can replace it for a fee, but since this is a refurb, battery health varies and may already be below 90% capacity.

Who Should Skip This

Anyone who keeps a ton of browser tabs open, edits photos, or runs demanding apps should skip this. The 8GB RAM fills up fast and swapping slows everything down. If you can't stand dongle life, the all-USB-C port setup will drive you nuts. And anyone who needs all-day battery without hunting for an outlet will be disappointed. Look at an M1 MacBook Air or a modern Ryzen ultrabook instead.

Verdict

Pick this up if you're deep in the Apple ecosystem, need a cheap, lightweight laptop for writing, email, and casual browsing, and don't mind a few dongles. It's not a machine for students who juggle heavy research or anyone doing photo or video work. The screen and build are lovely, but the performance ceiling is low. Budget buyers should seriously consider a refurbished M1 Air instead.

Usage Scores

Overall (54.9)Ai Llm (21.4)Gaming (24.9)Compact (70.6)Creator (52)Student (55.9)Business (60.3)Developer (45)Entertainment (61.5)

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