The MacBook Neo’s repairability is being framed as progress. The real story is that it took regulatory pressure and years of criticism for Apple to move an inch, and the rest of the lineup stays locked down.
The MacBook Neo’s Repairability Is a Concession to Regulation, Not Goodwill
In March 2026, TechCrunch and iFixit reported that Apple’s new MacBook Neo is the company’s most repairable laptop in about fourteen years. iFixit gave it a 6 out of 10 repairability score, with easy access to the battery (18 screws, no adhesive), modular USB-C ports and speakers, and a design that avoids glue and stretch-adhesive strips. The Verge and Marketscreener noted that the Neo targets the education market at around $499 and is positioned as Apple’s most affordable MacBook. According to TechCrunch, the improvement reflects pressure from regulators and campaigners: European sustainability rules and right-to-repair legislation in the U.S. have pushed manufacturers toward replaceable batteries and serviceable designs. Apple did not lead; it conceded.
TechCrunch has covered Apple’s defensive posture on repairability for years. The company expanded self-service repair to Europe and opened access to used iPhone components for repair, while defending “parts pairing” as necessary for security and privacy. Parts pairing is the practice of electronically linking components to the device so that replacement parts—even genuine ones—may not work without manufacturer authorisation; critics say it forces repairs through Apple and drives up cost and waste. Oregon passed a right-to-repair bill that targets parts pairing; California enacted similar legislation. Critics including iFixit and PIRG argue that parts pairing remains one of the most pernicious obstacles to right to repair. The MacBook Neo’s screw-mounted battery and modular components are a clear response to EU and state rules that require or incentivise removable batteries and longer-lasting design. The rest of Apple’s laptop lineup—the MacBook Air and Pro—remains thin, glued, and difficult to repair. One repairable model does not amount to a change of heart.
Mixvale and Marketscreener reported that the Neo still has soldered RAM, limiting upgrades, and that competitors like Lenovo ThinkPads score 9–10 on iFixit’s scale. The Neo is a single data point in a lineup that otherwise remains difficult to open and repair without specialist tools and authorised parts. So Apple has moved an inch: one model, one market segment, one concession to regulation. The narrative of progress is real for the Neo itself; the institutional story is that it took regulatory pressure and years of criticism for Apple to move that inch, and the rest of the lineup stays locked down.
What This Actually Means
Apple’s repairable MacBook is a concession, not a change of heart. It took EU and U.S. regulatory pressure and sustained criticism for the company to produce one more repairable model. The rest of the lineup remains locked down; parts pairing and thin-and-light design still define the premium products. Progress for the Neo is real; the broader story is that Apple moved only when it had to. The MacBook Neo is the exception that proves the rule.
What Is Right to Repair?
Right to repair is a movement and policy framework that seeks to ensure consumers and independent repairers can access parts, tools, and information to fix devices. Legislation in the EU (including the Right to Repair Directive applying from 2026) and in U.S. states such as Oregon and California requires or incentivises removable batteries, longer spare-parts availability, and limits on software that blocks third-party repair. Manufacturers have often resisted, citing security or design; campaigners argue that repairability extends product life and reduces waste. Apple’s MacBook Neo is one example of a product shaped by these rules.
iFixit’s repairability scores weigh factors such as ease of opening, availability of manuals and parts, and use of standard versus proprietary fasteners. A 6 out of 10 for the Neo reflects real gains—screw-mounted battery, modular ports, no stretch adhesive—but also limitations such as soldered RAM that prevent user upgrades. By contrast, many business-focused laptops from Lenovo and Dell achieve 8–10 on the same scale, with fully replaceable memory and storage. The EU’s Right to Repair Directive, which entered into force in 2024 and applies to new products from 2026, requires manufacturers to offer spare parts and repair information for years after sale; the MacBook Neo’s design aligns with those requirements for the education segment while the rest of Apple’s lineup does not. For buyers and repair advocates, the takeaway is clear: one repairable model is progress for that product, but the company’s broader stance has not changed without regulatory pressure.
Sources
- TechCrunch — MacBook Neo repairability
- The Verge — MacBook Neo teardown
- TechCrunch — Apple defends parts pairing
- Fix EU — Right to Repair 2026
Until the rest of the lineup follows the Neo’s lead, the message to consumers remains: buy repairability where it exists, and keep pushing for rules that make it the norm.