Amazon Slashes M5 MacBook Air Prices by $150, Stock Dwindling

The window is narrowing, and the entry point has already closed.
The 13-inch base model sold out over the weekend as demand for record-low M5 MacBook Air pricing surged.

In the quiet calculus of consumer patience and market timing, Amazon has briefly lowered the floor on Apple's M5 MacBook Air to prices that have no historical precedent — a moment that rewards those who have been watching and waiting. The $150 reductions across multiple configurations represent not a promotional gesture but a genuine pricing milestone, one that the market has already begun to consume. As with most intersections of genuine value and finite supply, the window between opportunity and scarcity is measured not in days, but in hours.

  • Amazon has cut M5 MacBook Air prices to their lowest-ever levels, with the 13-inch 512GB model falling to $949 and the 15-inch equivalent to $1,149 — $150 off across the board.
  • The weekend surge was swift and decisive: the most affordable 13-inch configuration has already sold out, signaling that demand was coiled and waiting for exactly this price point.
  • The breadth of the markdown — spanning multiple storage tiers and both screen sizes — suggests a deliberate lineup-wide reduction rather than a targeted flash sale on a single model.
  • Remaining inventory is concentrated in the 15-inch models with select color options still available, but the pattern of depletion makes clear that the window is actively closing.
  • For buyers who have been tracking MacBook Air pricing, the calculus has shifted: waiting is no longer a strategy — it is now a risk.

Amazon has dropped the M5 MacBook Air to its lowest-ever prices, cutting $150 across multiple configurations. The 13-inch model with 512GB of storage now sits at $949, down from $1,099, while the 15-inch equivalent starts at $1,149, reduced from $1,299. Higher-tier configurations with more memory and storage are similarly discounted, making this a lineup-wide markdown rather than a single-model promotion.

What distinguishes this moment is how quickly the market responded. Over the weekend, sales moved fast enough to deplete stock noticeably — and by the time the story was updated, the entry-level 13-inch model had already sold out entirely. The speed of that disappearance is itself a signal: price-conscious buyers had been waiting, and when the floor finally arrived, they acted.

Some 15-inch configurations with multiple color options remain available, but the trajectory is clear. These are factually the best prices Amazon has ever offered on these machines — not marketing language, but a verifiable statement about pricing history. For anyone who has been holding out for the right moment, that moment is now present but shrinking. The only meaningful question left is whether remaining inventory will outlast the decision to buy it.

Amazon has marked down the M5 MacBook Air to prices that haven't been seen before, slashing $150 off several configurations of the laptop. The 13-inch model with 512 gigabytes of storage is now $949, down from its original $1,099 price tag. Step up to 24 gigabytes of memory and a full terabyte of storage, and you're looking at $1,349 instead of $1,499. On the 15-inch side, the discounts are equally aggressive: the base 512-gigabyte model starts at $1,149, a $150 reduction from $1,299, with both of the larger storage configurations also marked down.

What makes this moment worth paying attention to is the velocity of the sellout. Over the weekend, these deals moved fast enough that inventory has already begun to thin. By the time this article was updated, the 13-inch 512-gigabyte model—the entry point to the sale—had already sold out. The pattern suggests that if you've been waiting for a reason to pull the trigger on an M5 MacBook Air, the window is narrowing. Multiple color options remain available across the 15-inch lineup, but the sense of urgency is real.

These are genuinely the lowest prices Amazon has ever offered on these specific configurations. That's not hyperbole or marketing language—it's a factual statement about the pricing history of these machines. For anyone who's been tracking MacBook Air deals over the past year or monitoring price drops, these numbers represent a genuine floor. The combination of the discount size and the fact that it applies across multiple storage tiers and screen sizes suggests this isn't a flash sale targeting one particular configuration, but rather a broader markdown on the entire M5 lineup.

The depletion of stock, particularly the quick disappearance of the most affordable option, tells you something about demand. People are buying these machines at these prices. The weekend surge wasn't a fluke—it was a signal that the market was waiting for exactly this kind of pricing. Now that signal has turned into scarcity. The 15-inch models with multiple color options still available suggest there's more inventory there, but the 13-inch base model vanishing so quickly indicates that the sweet spot for price-conscious buyers—the entry-level configuration—is where the real competition is happening.

If you're in the market for a MacBook Air and you've been holding out for a deal, this is the moment the deal has arrived. But it's also the moment when waiting becomes a risk. The pattern is clear: these prices are real, they're the best you'll find, and they're not going to last long. The question isn't whether this is a good deal—it objectively is. The question is whether you can act on it before the inventory that remains follows the 13-inch base model into unavailability.

If you've been holding off, now will be the time to get the M5 MacBook Air at these best-ever prices.
— MacRumors reporting
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why does it matter that the 13-inch base model sold out first?

Model

It tells you where the real demand is. That's the entry point—the price that makes someone who's been thinking about it finally say yes. When that one disappears, you know the deal actually worked.

Inventor

Are these prices going to come back?

Model

Probably not at this level. These are record lows. Amazon could run another sale later, but matching $150 off across the board? That's not a given. This is the floor until something changes in the market.

Inventor

What about the 15-inch models still in stock?

Model

They're moving slower, which makes sense—higher price point, smaller audience. But they're still discounted the same amount. If you want a bigger screen and you're flexible on timing, you might have a bit more breathing room.

Inventor

Should someone buy now or wait to see if prices drop further?

Model

These are record lows. Waiting for a better price is gambling. The real risk isn't that prices will drop—it's that stock will run out and you'll be back to paying full price.

Inventor

Why is MacRumors writing about this if they're making money from the links?

Model

Fair question. They're disclosing it upfront, which matters. But yeah, they have an incentive to drive clicks. That said, the facts are verifiable—you can check Amazon yourself and confirm the prices and the sellout.

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