If it's a working computer I'd rather keep it for that price.Just reading the posts for the day and looks like positive experiences. I am consider trading in my late 2013 13” MacBook Pro. Apple is quoting me $175 for it. Does that seem like a reasonable amount.
Sounds about right. I traded-in my 13" Late 2013 Retina 2.6GHz 512GB. In January Apple had offered $240 but by the time I was ready to jump for the 14" M1 Pro in early March the offer had dropped to $180. I did a quick scan of eBay prices and they were all around $200. The $20 hit for me was a cheap way to avoid advertising, packing, shipping and dealing with O/C buyers. I wondered if the trade-in partner would reduce offer because of some small scuffs on the bottom of the enclosure, but the day after they received the unit Apple notified me that they honored the full $180. Since it was ineligible for updating to OS Monterey I assume they sent it straight to materials recycling.Just reading the posts for the day and looks like positive experiences. I am consider trading in my late 2013 13” MacBook Pro. Apple is quoting me $175 for it. Does that seem like a reasonable amount.
Thanks a lot for your reply! I’m thankful for your reply as we have/had the same model and configuration. I think it’s a good trade in value for an 8 year old Mac but I’m still wondering what to upgrade too. I was thinking of maybe going with the 16 inch but am worried that it would be too big of a computer. Just kind of wondering also with the 1” of extra screen have you noticed that it is bigger on your new 14”Sounds about right. I traded-in my 13" Late 2013 Retina 2.6GHz 512GB. In January Apple had offered $240 but by the time I was ready to jump for the 14" M1 Pro in early March the offer had dropped to $180. I did a quick scan of eBay prices and they were all around $200. The $20 hit for me was a cheap way to avoid advertising, packing, shipping and dealing with O/C buyers. I wondered if the trade-in partner would reduce offer because of some small scuffs on the bottom of the enclosure, but the day after they received the unit Apple notified me that they honored the full $180. Since it was ineligible for updating to OS Monterey I assume they sent it straight to materials recycling.
The unit cost around $1800 8+ years ago, so my net out of pocket was ~$1600 or $200/year. I dragged it all over the U.S. and Europe and made multiple trips to the UK. Considering that I got a helluva lot of use out of it and had not a single problem, I think I did pretty well.
To me the 14" display is noticeably bigger, but not by much. Unfortunately I didn't compare them side-by-side before I shipped my trade-in. But I really like the contours of the re-designed body, which feels sturdier and more substantial with virtually no increase in weight (1.57 kg vs. 1.6 kg). In my lap the 14" feels identical to my previous unit. My decision was between the Max and Pro chips. I watched a ton of video reviews, focusing not just on general benchmarks but on things that early adopters were doing similar to my own workflow. Ultimately I concluded that the 10/16 Pro chip most closely matched the performance I needed, and it is without a doubt multiple times better than my 2013 MBP. Pretty much whatever I need it to do it does very fast or instantly.Thanks a lot for your reply! I’m thankful for your reply as we have/had the same model and configuration. I think it’s a good trade in value for an 8 year old Mac but I’m still wondering what to upgrade too. I was thinking of maybe going with the 16 inch but am worried that it would be too big of a computer. Just kind of wondering also with the 1” of extra screen have you noticed that it is bigger on your new 14”
Yeah, probably what I would have done if there was an Apple Store closer to me. The nearest is a 360 mile round-trip - not really sensible these days in a pickup that gets 20 mpg. ???I've always had great experiences trading in with Apple, but I do it directly in store and not via their trade in partner Phobio. The reviews for Phobio are absolutely terrible. If you purchase a new device from Apple, you have 14 days to trade in your old device. Just bring the device to the store with the receipt of the new product. I did this last month with my iPad Air and back in November with a Macbook Pro. In and out in under 5 minutes with a receipt verifying the value that I would get.
Yeah, that is a fair point. I am spoiled living in SoCal. Although it takes forever to get to an Apple Store; I have a dozen within an hour radius.Yeah, probably what I would have done if there was an Apple Store closer to me. The nearest is a 360 mile round-trip - not really sensible these days in a pickup that gets 20 mpg. ???
I think I’m going to purchase the 14”. The model I’m looking at is on sale at bestbuy right now for $250 off. It’s the base model 14”. I feel like it’s too good of a deal to pass up. If I trade in mine for $175, I could basically say I got $425 off a new one with the sale price and my trade in. It’s only the 8 core model with 512gb of storage but I don’t think it’s worth it to go to the 1tb with the 10 core as it’s $500 more. I have 300gb left of storage on my current Mac so I think 512 should hopefully be enough again. I currently keep my iTunes movies and tv shows saved on an external hard drive that’s 4tb and I will continue to do that. I have 1.6tb of movies and tv shows on that drive. I feel that I should back them up somewhere so I have 2 tv libraries one that has them downloaded on the external drive and another one with no downloads. It would be dumb to get a Mac with a huge internal storage just to store my purchased movies and tv shows on. Just kind of wondering your thoughts since you mentioned you researched the 8 vs 10 core models. Thanks.To me the 14" display is noticeably bigger, but not by much. Unfortunately I didn't compare them side-by-side before I shipped my trade-in. But I really like the contours of the re-designed body, which feels sturdier and more substantial with virtually no increase in weight (1.57 kg vs. 1.6 kg). In my lap the 14" feels identical to my previous unit. My decision was between the Max and Pro chips. I watched a ton of video reviews, focusing not just on general benchmarks but on things that early adopters were doing similar to my own workflow. Ultimately I concluded that the 10/16 Pro chip most closely matched the performance I needed, and it is without a doubt multiple times better than my 2013 MBP. Pretty much whatever I need it to do it does very fast or instantly.
In terms of 14" vs. 16" I guess there are basically 3 questions: Do you need the additional screen real estate for the things you do, will you mind the increased bulk and weight (+.5 kg), are you ok with the extra cost? I've noticed lots of people having a tough time deciding, but I've seen more instances of people exchanging the larger unit for the 14" than the reverse. If you haven't already done, watch some YT vids by folks who faced the same decision. You can always try the 16" and return it for the smaller form factor if it's not what you need.
Whichever model you finally stay with, enjoy it!
I traded in the store. This is the fastest way. Get an instant quote and an instant gift card. Plus they don't need the accessories just the MacBook.For the trade in, they send a box with a prepaid label and basically all you have to do is box your Mac up and put the label on it and drop it off at FedEx or ups?
Hi Jerkin:
I got a trade value quote of $720 for a 2016 MBP15 that was in pristine condition. Laptop was sent in as directed by Apple. I got the full $720 plus sales tax.
It was an easy and good experience.
Don
" I did this last month with my iPad Air and back in November with a Macbook Pro."Yeah, probably what I would have done if there was an Apple Store closer to me. The nearest is a 360 mile round-trip - not really sensible these days in a pickup that gets 20 mpg. ???
No, they did not. It is fast and easy. Also, I had some dead pixels which didn't make a difference." I did this last month with my iPad Air and back in November with a Macbook Pro."
Wait - Apple will take Macs for trade-in at an Apple Store? I thought they stopped doing that.
No, they did not. It is fast and easy. Also, I had some dead pixels which didn't make a difference.