Apple's OLED MacBook Pro Launch Moves Closer With Panel Production - MacRumors
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Apple's OLED MacBook Pro Launch Moves Closer With Panel Production

Development of Apple's rumored OLED MacBook Pro took another forward step this month when the next-generation production line responsible for manufacturing its displays commenced operation.

M6 MacBook Pro Feature 1
Samsung Display is expected to make the panels for Apple's MacBook Pro, and has invested heavily in an 8.6-generation OLED production line located at its Asan campus in South Korea.

An 8.6G fab uses much larger glass substrates than the OLED lines used for smartphones, which allows multiple laptop-sized panels to be cut from a single sheet. This improves yields and lowers costs, which is just what Apple needs if OLED is to replace mini-LED in the MacBook Pro.

The line is designed around rigid OLED panels with oxide TFT backplanes and advanced tandem OLED structures. These are better suited to laptops, and offer higher brightness, improved power efficiency, and longer lifespan compared with conventional single-stack OLED panels.

According to the account yeux1122 on the Naver blog, Samsung has now begun producing panels from the line, suggesting Apple and other customers have completed qualification and reliability testing.

Apple's first OLED MacBook Pro will also feature a touchscreen display, according to analyst Ming-Chi Kuo. The claim has been corroborated by Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman, who also said the laptops will have "thinner and lighter frames." Apple is apparently focusing on delivering the thinnest possible device without compromising on battery life or major new features.

The redesigned 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro models are also expected to have a hole-punch camera at the top of the display, and it could potentially be housed in a pill-shaped cutout similar to the iPhone's Dynamic Island, rather than the notch MacBook Pro owners are accustomed to.

Gurman says the machines will be powered by M6 chips and are being readied for a late 2026 or early 2027 launch, following the expected introduction of 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro models with M5 Pro and M5 Max chips in the next month or so.

It would be unusual for Apple to introduce two ‌MacBook Pro‌ refreshes in the same year, but there is precedent for it: Apple updated the MacBook Pro lineup twice in 2023, first with M2 Pro/M2 Max chips in January and then with M3/M3 Pro/M3 Max chips in late October.

Related Roundup: MacBook Pro
Tag: OLED
Buyer's Guide: MacBook Pro (Buy Now)
Related Forum: MacBook Pro

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Top Rated Comments

Jaziry Avatar
10 weeks ago
Please make the touch screen optional. I definitely (1000%) hate it.

Firstly, the way anybody touching the laptop screen while we already have a trackpad or mouse is stupid. And I hate fingerprints on the display except maybe my iPhone's since it's inevitable.
Score: 28 Votes (Like | Disagree)
H.E. Pennypacker Avatar
10 weeks ago
The current mini LED screens are already outstanding. On a 14” or 16” display, at normal viewing distance, the OLED wow factor mostly disappears into diminishing returns. This isn’t a living room TV it’s a laptop. Unless you’re pixel peeping HDR video in a dark room, most daily use (email docs browsing) won’t look meaningfully different. In fact, those static UI elements are where OLED has real downsides. Feels less like a must have upgrade and more like Apple needing something new to market.
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Hajj.david Avatar
10 weeks ago

Punch-hole cam isn't necessary. There are surely cams on the market that would be good enough that can fit in the bezel. Panel isn't thick, but it's 2026. Time to stop message around. Heck, by now they should have a MBP with camera and Face ID in the bezel up there (no notch, no punch). No need to wait for under-display Face ID that's been coming for years, and years.
Look at a current mac's screen do you see how thin it is at the top? Web cam hardware will not fit in it.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Naraxus Avatar
10 weeks ago
"The claim has been corroborated by Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman..."

Mark's been feeling a little left out lately so he'll "corroboate" a claim, get his name out there once again so he can later on boast how right his "corroboration/sources" were.

And if it turns out the original source was wrong he can blame others and walk away squeeky clean.

Win-win.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
10 weeks ago
I'm so sick of Apple prioritizing thinness and weight over more performance and battery life. If that's what I wanted, I would go with the MacBook Air. The Pro line can be thicker and heavier than the current generation and most pro users would prioritize performance and battery over physical characteristics.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
SilmarilFinder Avatar
10 weeks ago
I love OLED screens on TVs, but I still have big reservations on computers, mainly cost and burn-in. Apple loves static UI elements, and that menu bar is basically permanent. A beautifully menu bar burned into a £3,000 laptop sounds like a fantastic idea.

As for touchscreens, I have been using touchscreen PCs as work machines for years and, if you get the right hardware, it is genuinely great. I still do not believe Apple has needed to avoid touch for this long. If they actually commit and do it properly, I would absolutely love a touchscreen MacBook.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)