CALIFORNIA: Apple has quietly drawn the curtain on one of its most powerful machines. The Mac Pro has been discontinued, scrubbed from Apple’s website, with no plans for future hardware, marking the end of the road for a device long synonymous with pro-grade computing.
The move, confirmed to 9to5Mac, was executed without fanfare. The Mac Pro’s buy page now redirects to the broader Mac lineup, where all traces of the workstation have vanished. More decisively, Apple has made clear this is not a pause but a full stop, there is no next-generation Mac Pro in the pipeline.
First introduced in its current industrial design in 2019 alongside the Pro Display XDR, the Mac Pro was built to win back high-end users with modularity and brute force. It was later updated with Apple’s in-house silicon, featuring the M2 Ultra chip in 2023. But that proved to be its last refresh. At $6,999, the machine lingered without upgrades even as newer chips, including the M3 Ultra, powered more compact and capable systems.
The centre of gravity has since shifted. The Mac Studio, now configurable with an M3 Ultra chip, up to a 32-core CPU, 80-core GPU, 256GB of unified memory and 16TB of storage, has effectively taken over as Apple’s pro desktop. Smaller, quieter and more efficient, it delivers workstation-level performance without the bulk or the legacy baggage.
Apple’s desktop lineup is now leaner, a 24-inch iMac with M4, the Mac mini with M4 and M4 Pro, and the Mac Studio at the top end. On the portable side sit the MacBook Neo, MacBook Air and MacBook Pro, covering a wide spectrum of users and price points.
There is also a broader architectural shift at play. With macOS Tahoe 26.2, Apple introduced low-latency RDMA over Thunderbolt 5, allowing multiple Macs to be linked for high-end workloads, an alternative to relying on a single, monolithic workstation. For many professionals, that capability undercuts the very premise of the Mac Pro.
For years, the Mac Pro stood as Apple’s ultimate machine, built for video editors, developers and studios pushing hardware to its limits. Its exit will sting loyalists who prized its expandability and raw power. But the signals have been flashing for a while, slower updates, faster rivals within Apple’s own lineup, and a shrinking gap between niche and mainstream performance.
In the end, Apple has chosen consolidation over nostalgia. The Mac Pro is gone, and the future is smaller, faster and far less modular.