Apple just refreshed the Studio Display. It carries the same gorgeous 27-inch 5K screen, same $1,599 price tag, but a handful of changes that’ll either excite you or make you squint at the press release wondering what took so long.
Let’s start with what didn’t move. The panel is identical; 5120 x 2880 at 218 pixels per inch, 600 nits, P3 wide color, True Tone. And yes, it still supports 60Hz refresh rate — that looks more like a deliberate choice than a technical limitation. Nano-texture glass is still an optional add-on if your office lighting situation is genuinely terrible.
2026 Studio Display gets Thunderbolt 5 ports
Where Apple actually put in work is everywhere around the screen.
Thunderbolt 3 is gone. The new model runs two Thunderbolt 5 ports (up to 120 Gb/s) — one upstream to your Mac with 96W host charging, one downstream for accessories or chaining additional displays — alongside two USB-C ports at 10 Gb/s. The included cable is now a Thunderbolt 5 Pro cable (which is good). If daisy-chaining was the reason you passed on the original, that excuse just disappeared.
The camera is worth talking about. Still 12MP, still Center Stage, but Desk View is now part of the package. It shows your face and a top-down view of your desk at the same time during video calls. Sounds like a feature you’d ignore until the first time you’re talking someone through something physical — a document, a sketch, a repair — and then it becomes the thing you mention to everyone.

The three-mic array with directional beam-forming stays put. Six speakers, Spatial Audio, Dolby Atmos, force-cancelling woofers — same setup, though Apple says the bass runs 30% deeper than before.
You can’t use the device with an Intel-powered Mac
One thing worth flagging: this display now requires Apple silicon. Intel Macs are out. You’ll need macOS Tahoe 26.3.1 or later on the Mac side, and iPadOS 26.3.1 or later if you’re connecting an iPad.
Pricing held at $1,599, or $1,499 for education. Pre-orders go live tomorrow and units ship March 11. I’d say that four years between updates is a long wait, especially since not much has changed. Whether what changed justifies the same price is the whole question — but at minimum, nobody can complain about the webcam anymore.















































