So if I trade in my 16 inch MacBook Pro M1 can I bring it in the store to get credit towards an M3 MacBook Pro?
only you can answer that if you truly need the performance. The M1 is still no slouch. The M1 macbooks have all taken big hits to value recently, so you're looking at only a $100-$200 price delta between trade in and paying the ebay extortion and shipping fees. You also run the risk of being scammed and being out of money and a laptop. You can also brave offerup/craigslist, but I hope you can defend yourself and get used to $500 lowball offers for your macbook.is the M3 that much better that I should upgrade from the M1?
wow - I can get a little over 1,000 from appleonly you can answer that if you truly need the performance. The M1 is still no slouch. The M1 macbooks have all taken big hits to value recently, so you're looking at only a $100-$200 price delta between trade in and paying the ebay extortion and shipping fees. You also run the risk of being scammed and being out of money and a laptop. You can also brave offerup/craigslist, but I hope you can defend yourself and get used to $500 lowball offers for your macbook.
Look at all the sold listings on ebay to see what the market value is for your M1 Macbook. Calculate seller and shipping fees and that's your net profit. For me, I was looking at roughly $200 difference. I'd rather just eat the $200 for piece of mind. We've got too many shady characters here in southern Cali to make it worth my time to sell it locally.wow - I can get a little over 1,000 from apple
You didn't say your config, but I'm guessing it's the same as mine, or close (16"/1TB/16GB), since Apple offers me $1,070.wow - I can get a little over 1,000 from apple
Not necessarily true. Plenty of times I’ve bought online then did a trade in at the store so I don’t risk it getting damaged. They applied the trade in credit towards the online order.You would have to complete the trade in and order in store.
Yeah, I just checked. Apple offers $1070 for a 16" M1 MBP w/ 16 GB/1TB, and the average sellling price on eBay is $1,350, which works out to $1,170 after their 13.5% fee (not including what you'll have to pay for shipping, plus the hassle).only you can answer that if you truly need the performance. The M1 is still no slouch. The M1 macbooks have all taken big hits to value recently, so you're looking at only a $100-$200 price delta between trade in and paying the ebay extortion and shipping fees. You also run the risk of being scammed and being out of money and a laptop. You can also brave offerup/craigslist, but I hope you can defend yourself and get used to $500 lowball offers for your macbook.
The thing is, if you want a BTO (I'm still baffled why the M3Max unbinned chip still comes with just a measly 1TB SSD), you're stuck with Apple mostly. I still like my M1Max MBP 16, but I traded it in as the 1TB SSD is just too limiting for video editing.I found that Apple seems to consistently offer the highest trade-in of the "easy" options. Unfortunately--unless going refurb and the occasional ed discount--they consistently ask the highest prices. My base 16" M1 MBP fetches $1005 @ Apple and $850 at Best Buy. Closest competitor is macsales for trade-in at $974.
If looking to upgrade (by the way, in my opinion the most significant difference is GPU performance, otherwise no), try shopping price differences after trade-in. The sales at Best Buy actually made it cheaper for me to take their lower trade-in value and upgrade to an M3 Pro 16"--but that's only because I can find an base open box 16" MBP for sub $2100 at local stores. YMMV
By the way, I DIDN'T upgrade. Walked (actually ran) away from an 16" M3 Pro yesterday that was priced at $2041--it was OB in excellent condition. I almost walked out with it. But the performance differences for my work are marginal and the M1 Pro is just such a reliable machine for what I do. Although that SB color on the 16" is really quite spectacular, I knew it was just a "novelty" purchase for the new color, not for any logical reason...Dang Apple Marketing.
Same here. The horrid 3rd party that Apple uses for trade in, will ALWAYS mark down your trade in. Taking it to the Apple store will usually give you the best value short of a huge dent/scratch or a cracked screen.Unless they've changed things, you should be able to take the old machine to the store and get an Apple gift card. Then you can purchase the new machine on line or whatever.
I had a bad experience mailing in an iPad on trade. Since then I only trade in at the store.
Buy the new MacBook. Take home to transfer data, come back to Apple Store and then apply towards your invoice for a partial refund. Whatever you do, don’t mail it in!So if I go into the Apple Store to buy the M3 MacBook Pro, do I have to bring my current MacBook that I'm going to be trading in with me or can I keep it to transfer all my data and then send it into Apple tomorrow or Tuesday?
A couple years ago when I traded in my iMac they let me do the migration right there at the genius bar so I could get everything done in one shot. Granted, it was a slow(er) Saturday night--and a couple years ago. YMMVBuy the new MacBook. Take home to transfer data, come back to Apple Store and then apply towards your invoice for a partial refund. Whatever you do, don’t mail it in!
I mean you could do that, but my local Apple store is so crazy busy and packed that I wouldn't recommend it. Plus the wifi is so congested it would take ages unless you plugged them together.A couple years ago when I traded in my iMac they let me do the migration right there at the genius bar so I could get everything done in one shot. Granted, it was a slow(er) Saturday night--and a couple years ago. YMMV
No, but usually they just offer you a little less.anyone know if I have to return my MacBook Pro charger when I send it back in on a trade in?