Is the MacBook Pro 14" M5 Max worth it for video editing in 2026?
The MacBook Pro 14" with M5 Max is Apple's compact beast. With 40 GPU cores, 614 GB/s bandwidth and up to 128 GB of unified memory, it beats similarly priced Windows desktop workstations in video editing and 3D rendering.
Editing score
96
/ 100
Unified memory
36–128
GB · 614 GB/s
Indicative price ES
~3799 €
✓ Ideal for
- • 8K RAW and ProRes RAW editing without proxy
- • DaVinci Resolve with advanced Fusion and AI effects
- • Professional 3D rendering (Blender, Cinema 4D)
- • Local AI with large models (+30B parameters)
- • 8K multicam and VFX production workflows
✗ Limitations
- • Budget-conscious users (M5 Pro is enough for most)
- • High-performance AAA gaming (dedicated GPU still better)
- • Needs covered by the M5 Pro for 4K editing
Compatibility with editing software
Real-world performance of the MacBook Pro 14" M5 Max on each professional editing application.
Final Cut Pro
Exceptional. Real-time ProRes RAW rendering and export. The perfect match for Final Cut Pro.
DaVinci Resolve
Excellent. Fusion, AI effects and 8K grading run smoothly. Apple Neural Engine accelerates Blackmagic AI tools.
Adobe Premiere Pro
Compatible and fast via Metal. Accelerated export. Some Adobe AI features are NVIDIA-exclusive on PC.
Blender (Cycles)
Good via Metal. Slower than NVIDIA RTX in Cycles OptiX, but very energy-efficient.
Which video formats does the MacBook Pro 14" M5 Max memory cover?
Apple unified memory replaces discrete VRAM. The MacBook Pro 14" M5 Max can be configured up to 128 GB.
1080p H.264/H.265
No limitations
4K H.264/H.265
Smooth without proxy
4K RAW / ProRes
Ideal, no proxy
8K / ProRes RAW
Smooth
Hardware-accelerated codecs on the MacBook Pro 14" M5 Max
ProRes RAW hardware support lets you edit footage from professional cameras (RED, ARRI, Sony FX) without proxy.
Apple alternatives for editing
FAQ — MacBook Pro 14" M5 Max for editing
Is the MacBook Pro 14" M5 Max worth it for video editing in 2026?
The MacBook Pro 14" with M5 Max is Apple's compact beast. With 40 GPU cores, 614 GB/s bandwidth and up to 128 GB of unified memory, it beats similarly priced Windows desktop workstations in video editing and 3D rendering. In editing it scores 96/100. With up to 128 GB of unified memory and 614 GB/s bandwidth, it handles 4K RAW and ProRes RAW formats without proxy.
Is the MacBook Pro 14" M5 Max compatible with DaVinci Resolve?
Excellent. Fusion, AI effects and 8K grading run smoothly. Apple Neural Engine accelerates Blackmagic AI tools.
How much unified memory do I need to edit video on a Mac?
For smooth 4K H.264/H.265 in DaVinci Resolve or Final Cut Pro, 16 GB of unified memory is the recommended minimum. For 4K RAW or ProRes 4444, 24–36 GB is ideal. For 8K RAW without proxy, 48 GB or more. The MacBook Pro 14" M5 Max offers up to 128 GB.
Is a Mac M5 Max or a dedicated Windows GPU better for editing?
The MacBook Pro 14" M5 Max is competitive with or superior to similarly priced Windows GPUs in DaVinci Resolve and Final Cut Pro, thanks to ProRes hardware engines and high-speed unified memory. The difference lies in software: if you use Final Cut Pro or DaVinci Resolve on Mac, Apple Silicon wins. If you use Topaz Video AI or effects requiring CUDA, an RTX wins.