According to a freshly uploaded benchmark result to the Geekbench database, the new Apple M5 chip inside the 14-inch MacBook Pro (14‑inch, M5) is delivering a substantial performance leap compared with the prior-generation M4-based model.
With the single-core score hitting ~4,263 and a multi-core tally of ~17,862, it appears the M5 is firmly ahead of the M4 family.
While these are early numbers and should be treated with some caution, they do give a strong hint of what to expect from the upcoming MacBook Pro refresh.
Benchmark Numbers & What They Mean
The benchmark in question shows the M5 14-inch MacBook Pro scoring:
- Single-core: ~ 4,263
- Multi-core: ~ 17,862
By comparison, models with the M4 chip (in the previous generation) typically posted multi-core scores around ~14,700 and single-core at ~3,770.
That means: - The single-core score is up by ~12-13% (from ~3,770 to ~4,263).
- The multi-core jump is more significant: up from ~14,700 to ~17,862 (roughly +21-25%).
These gains reflect meaningful architecture improvements not just minor tweaks.
Why the Gains Matter
Single-core performance
Single-core scores remain relevant because many everyday macOS tasks (web browsing, document editing, light development work) often rely on one or two strong cores rather than large core counts. So an uptick in single-core score helps responsiveness, snappier UI, and faster launch/resume times.
Multi-core performance
The larger jump in multi-core shows that for heavier workloads (video editing, compiling, running containers, multi-app multitasking) the M5 is likely a more capable performer. For Pro users of the MacBook Pro line, this is an important upgrade.
Implications for Pro users
For professionals working with demanding software (e.g., Xcode builds, Final Cut Pro, 3D modelling), the multi-core improvements could reduce wait times and improve efficiency. That strengthens the proposition of purchasing the refreshed model rather than sticking with older hardware.
What It Tells Us About the M5 MacBook Pro Lineup
The 14-inch M5 MacBook Pro is already available for preorder (price starting at US $1,599) and will go on sale on October 22, 2025.
It also points out that further models (such as a 16-inch variant) using M4 Pro/M4 Max are still expected early in 2026.
Therefore:
- Apple is using the M5 chip in this refresh to give the MacBook Pro line a performance uplift ahead of its full Pro/Max tier refresh.
- The 14-inch form factor may be accelerating attention as a capable “all-rounder Pro” machine.
- The performance gap may justify an upgrade for users on older Intel-based or early M1/M2 models.
For Apple Inc. this benchmark advance helps reinforce their position in the laptop market:
- It continues the narrative of vertical integration (Apple designs its own silicon) being a competitive advantage.
- It gives Apple more headroom to differentiate performance and efficiency versus PC competitors.
- With this refresh, the MacBook Pro stays relevant for professional workflows, reducing the risk of “Pro” users looking elsewhere.
From a market standpoint, showing strong benchmark numbers before release helps build anticipation, justify price points, and reaffirm the Pro-tier brand.
If you’re thinking of buying the 14-inch M5 MacBook Pro based on these numbers, here are some questions to ask:
- Are you currently using a machine that is meaningfully slower (for example, older Intel or early Apple Silicon)?
- Does your workflow benefit from enhanced multi-core performance? (e.g., video editing, compiling, large datasets)
- Do you care about improved efficiency, battery life or thermals (which are likely but yet unconfirmed)?
- Are you sensitive to cost and willing to wait for further reviews (particularly for battery/thermals) before committing?
- If you already have an M4-based MacBook Pro, will the uplift justify the upgrade? Perhaps not for all users.
As ever, benchmark numbers are a helpful signal but don’t replace hands-on review results.
In short: the early benchmark results for the 14-inch MacBook Pro with Apple’s M5 chip look very promising showing meaningful uplifts in both single-core and multi-core performance over the M4 chip. While the improvements are not revolutionary, they are substantial and should translate into better responsiveness and faster performance for both everyday and heavy-duty workflows.
That said, the full picture (battery life, thermals, sustained performance) remains to be seen. For buyers who prioritize performance and are planning a Pro-level purchase anyway, this refresh makes a compelling case. For others, especially those on recent machines, it may be worth waiting until full reviews arrive.
Either way, the M5 MacBook Pro appears to be a strong step forward in the Pro laptop segment.




