Daily Guardian
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Climate
  • Auto
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
What's On

Lack of Quebec data clouds assessment of child protection system disparities

January 16, 2026

Kelowna business operators decry having to pay to voice crime concerns at public forum

January 16, 2026

‘It was about time’: Saskatchewan producers welcome Canada-China deal

January 16, 2026

I saw the future of retail, and it’s all AI

January 16, 2026

Ottawa reduces Toronto housing funding, cancels Red Deer agreement

January 16, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Finance Pro
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Climate
  • Auto
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
Daily Guardian
Home » Apple iPad Pro (2025) review: fast, faster, fastest
Technology

Apple iPad Pro (2025) review: fast, faster, fastest

By News RoomOctober 21, 20257 Mins Read
Apple iPad Pro (2025) review: fast, faster, fastest
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
Apple iPad Pro (2025) review: fast, faster, fastest

What do you get the tablet that has everything? Last year, Apple debuted a massive overhaul to the iPad Pro, with a thin new design, a gorgeous new screen, a bunch of updated accessories, and a speedy new chip. I called it the best iPad ever. I also wondered how it could even get much better.

The answer, at least this year, is apparently it couldn’t. The new iPad Pro is, in every way that matters, the exact same thing as last year’s Pro. It still comes in 11- and 13-inch models, which start at $999 and $1,299, respectively. It still comes in two colors. It’s still gorgeous. Okay, fine, there is one discernible difference: It doesn’t say “iPad Pro” or have a line of fine print on the back. Apple took one step off the assembly line. Tell your grandkids.

Inside, there’s more change to similar effect. The latest Pro has a new chip, the M5, and Apple swapped in its own networking chips — the C1X for cellular connection and the N1 for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and (theoretically) Threads. As you’d expect, everything’s a little faster, and as you’d expect, none of it makes any practical difference in your day-to-day use of the iPad.

And yet, after spending the better part of a week using a 13-inch iPad Pro, I’m more compelled by it than I expected to be. The biggest reason by far is not the new hardware but iPadOS 26, which finally imbues the iPad with some PC-like powers, from the free-form multitasking to the menu bar to the massively improved Files app. There are still a lot of things that are easy on the Mac and hamfistedly complicated on the iPad, and Liquid Glass remains a mistake, but Apple has clearly decided that iPads should just be more like Macs.

You can get iPadOS 26 on lots of iPads, including last year’s Pro. The M5 Pro is the best but also the most expensive, as the Pro always is: I don’t know why you’d get this device unless you’re also getting an Apple Pencil or a Magic Keyboard or both, and at that point this is at least a $1,500 expense. If you need a computer, I’d still recommend a Mac to most people. But if you want an iPad, and you want the best iPad, there’s no other choice.

Apple's M5 iPad Pro being used by a man in a car.

$999

The Good

  • Better performance than ever
  • Hardware remains unbeaten
  • iPadOS is getting more Mac-like

The Bad

  • Still too expensive for a secondary computer

For nearly everything you need to know about the iPad Pro, you should read my review from last year. Only a few things have changed. The first, of course, is the M5 chip. In benchmark tests, it scores about 11 percent higher than the M4 on standard CPU tasks and a full 34 percent higher on GPU tasks. That’s a big number, and it bears out: The M4 Pro was a zippy machine for playing games, exporting video, and editing photos, but the M5 Pro is even a beat faster and a little sharper. (Did I win my first round of Fortnite on the M5 Pro just because the graphics were so good? Who can say?) It doesn’t get hot and it doesn’t seem to throttle under duress. It’s just a terrific processor.

If you’re coming from, say, an M1-powered iPad Pro, you’ll notice the performance improvement right away. Things that used to load and buffer now just render and save almost instantly. The leap from the M4, though, will only really appear if you’re moving huge amounts of video or 3D renderings through the machine. For all but the most aggressive, creative-professional workflows, the M4 was and is more than enough processor.

A photo of the M5 iPad Pro from the side.

Even a generation later, this is still an unbeatable tablet design.
Photo: David Pierce / The Verge

When Apple started to move to its own networking chips rather than buying them from companies like Broadcom, the overarching question was not whether they’d be better but whether they could even be as good. Rest easy: they are. In fact, my internet speeds are consistently faster on the M5 Pro than the M4 Pro. Sometimes way faster. There are lots of possible reasons for internet speeds to fluctuate, so I don’t want to get too excited about Apple’s work here, but I can say confidently that you don’t need to worry about the chip switch.

The new charger might be the coolest thing in iPad-land this year

There’s a new charger in the box with the new Pro, which might actually be the coolest new thing in iPad-land this year. It’s a small, light 40-watt charger that can, for short periods of time, ramp its output up to 60 watts in order to charge your device much more quickly. My tests matched Apple’s exactly: I put the M5 Pro on the charger dead, and exactly 30 minutes later it was at 50 percent. I did the same with the M4 Pro, and it was at 33 percent after half an hour. Good stuff in either case! This charger’s going everywhere with me from now on.

A photo of the backside of the iPad Pro.

No more fine print! Still lots of fingerprints.
Photo: David Pierce / The Verge

That’s it. That’s every new thing about the M5 iPad Pro. It’s faster! Somewhere between a little faster and a lot faster, depending on which iPad you’re upgrading from. Apple wants you to think that every bit of performance gain matters, because AI workflows are becoming ubiquitous and Foundation Models are part of everything you do. Whether you think slightly faster AI image generation is a killer app is between you and your god, but so far, Image Playground isn’t tempting me to upgrade. This is a chip bump through and through.

This is a chip bump through and through

If you’re shopping for an iPad Pro, I’d tell most people to see if you can get a good deal on an M4 Pro, which remains plenty good and plenty powerful for almost everything. But if you are on the absolute bleeding edge of the iPad, I struggle to find a reason you won’t love the M5 Pro. It’s the best, even better.

I worried with last year’s model that the iPad Pro was almost too good a piece of hardware, given how limited iPadOS continued to be. Those shackles aren’t all the way off with iPadOS 26, but they’re getting there. The M5 Pro now feels a lot like a super-fast laptop that never seems to slow down, even when I have 10 overlapping apps open just because I can. It’s more intuitive to navigate, especially with a trackpad and keyboard. You can find things in Files now! We’re still a lot of desktop-class apps away from a full “what is a computer” crisis, but iPadOS 26 makes clear that Apple thinks of the iPad as more or less just a laptop. And the M5 Pro is one of the best and best-looking laptops I’ve ever used.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

  • David Pierce

    David Pierce

    David Pierce

    Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All by David Pierce

  • Apple

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Apple

  • iPad

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All iPad

  • Reviews

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Reviews

  • Tablet Reviews

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Tablet Reviews

  • Tech

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Tech

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

I saw the future of retail, and it’s all AI

Ads are coming soon to ChatGPT, starting with shopping links

Google is appealing a judge’s search monopoly ruling

OpenAI releases a cheaper ChatGPT subscription

The two things AMD subtly revealed at CES that actually excite me

Google brings its AI videomaker to Workspace users

Verizon-owned Visible is offering outage credits, too

X is still having issues following an hour-long outage on Friday

600,000 Trump Mobile phones sold? There’s no proof.

Editors Picks

Kelowna business operators decry having to pay to voice crime concerns at public forum

January 16, 2026

‘It was about time’: Saskatchewan producers welcome Canada-China deal

January 16, 2026

I saw the future of retail, and it’s all AI

January 16, 2026

Ottawa reduces Toronto housing funding, cancels Red Deer agreement

January 16, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Canada news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

Quickley out for Raptors vs. Clippers

January 16, 2026

Ads are coming soon to ChatGPT, starting with shopping links

January 16, 2026

N.S. missing kids: Stepfather denies abuse allegations, says he puts ‘full trust’ in RCMP

January 16, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Daily Guardian Canada. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version