Skip to Content

Two More Studio Display 2 Upgrades Leaked in New Report

Macworld's Filipe Espósito today again reported that Apple appears to be developing two new Studio Display models with different specs.

Apple Studio Display Magic Trackpad Keyboard Mouse
Based on lines of code in "internal Apple files," which likely refers to a macOS Tahoe Kernel Debug Kit that leaked online last year, Espósito continues to believe that both of the new Studio Display models will feature ProMotion, enabling up to a 120Hz refresh rate, as well as HDR support for increased brightness and dynamic range.

For the higher-end Studio Display, the report has revealed two more potential upgrades that had yet to be rumored until now, including superior speakers and more and/or higher-spec ports. Apple says the current Studio Display has a "high-fidelity six-speaker system" that supports Spatial Audio, and the monitor has one Thunderbolt 3 port that connects to and charges a Mac, and three USB-C ports for connecting accessories.

The new Studio Display will likely feature at least one Thunderbolt 5 port, to ensure there is enough bandwidth for both 5K resolution at 120Hz and accessories. However, another leaker curiously claimed that at least one of the new Studio Display models will max out at 90Hz, so we will have to see which of these rumors is accurate. A boost to the current 60Hz refresh rate can make videos and scrolling look smoother to the eye.

Espósito said that the higher-end Studio Display could have a 32-inch screen, whereas the lower-end model would likely stick with a 27-inch screen. However, this particular claim was merely speculation, rather than info from the internal Apple files. Keep in mind that with a 32-inch screen, 5K resolution would not be Retina quality, so the resolution would have to increase to 6K like on Apple's higher-end Pro Display XDR.

Display industry expert Ross Young previously said that at least one new Studio Display would feature mini-LED backlighting. If so, perhaps Apple will opt to discontinue its Pro Display XDR with full-array LED backlighting and instead offer both lower-end and higher-end Studio Display configurations. But again, this is just speculation.

Another previously-rumored feature for at least one of the new Studio Display models is an A19 or A19 Pro chip, up from the A13 Bionic chip in the current model. This would contribute to improved performance, camera enhancements, and more.

Altogether, the full set of Studio Display upgrades could include a higher 120Hz refresh rate, HDR support for increased brightness and contrast ratio, improved speakers, Thunderbolt 5 support, mini-LED backlighting, a newer A19 or A19 Pro chip for performance and camera enhancements, and hopefully a larger 32-inch screen.

No major design changes are expected.

Apple reportedly plans to release the new Studio Display models in the first half of 2026. The current Studio Display launched in March 2022, alongside the first Mac Studio, so there has been a long wait for a refresh. With a new Apple monitor surfacing in a regulatory database last month, a launch should finally be getting close.

Related Forum: Mac Accessories

Popular Stories

Apple Announces Special Event in New York Feature 1

Apple Teases 'A Big Week Ahead' With Announcements Starting Monday

Thursday February 26, 2026 6:06 am PST by
Apple CEO Tim Cook today teased "a big week ahead," with announcements starting Monday. His post included an #AppleLaunch hashtag with a colorful Apple logo, along with a short video that ultimately shows an Apple logo on the lid of a Mac. Apple is reportedly planning a three-day stretch of product announcements from Monday, March 2 through Wednesday, March 4, with up to five new products...
iphone fold text

iPhone Fold Crease Measurements Revealed as Device Hits Production

Wednesday February 25, 2026 5:37 am PST by
Apple has submitted production line orders for its upcoming foldable iPhone, effectively confirming that the device will launch this year, claims a Chinese leaker. According to the Weibo account "Fixed Focus Digital," assembly lines recently received the orders from Apple, which has apparently allowed the leaker to learn the crease measurements for the device's 7.8-inch inner display....
macbook air blue

What's Coming in the M5 MacBook Air

Thursday February 26, 2026 3:57 pm PST by
Along with the low-cost MacBook, Apple could introduce a refreshed version of the MacBook Air next week. Most of the focus will be on the new machine, but the MacBook Air is expected to get some useful internal updates. M5 Chip The next-generation MacBook Air will adopt the M5 chip, which Apple already introduced in the iPad Pro and MacBook Pro models that came out last year. Apple's M5...

Top Rated Comments

turbineseaplane Avatar
2 days ago at 07:21 am
How about adding a 2nd input?

This is 2026, not 2003.
Score: 36 Votes (Like | Disagree)
2 days ago at 08:52 am

When we going to get ProMotion HDR that exceeds 120Hz?

Gaming industry monitors refresh rate 120Hz/240/480Hz, Apple still stuck on 120Hz for some of its hardware line. Instead of going forward it’s going backwards to 90Hz with 120Hz still being the cap. I guess this will be called ProMotion lite.
It’s easy to get caught up in the refresh rate arms race, but the Studio Display isn't a gaming monitor -- it’s a 5K production tool (or maybe higher resolution in the newer one(s) coming out). Driving 14.7 million pixels is a massive bandwidth load compared to a 1080p or 1440p gaming screen.

For example, a 1440p monitor is about 3.7 MP (mega/million pixels), 4K is about 8.3 MP, 5K is about 14.7 MP, and 6K is about 20.4 MP.

In other words, 4K is 2.25X the pixels of 1440p, 5K is 1.78X the pixels of 4K, and 6K is 1.38X the pixels of 5K. That means a 6K monitor has 5.5X the pixels of a 1440p one (and 5K is almost 4X the pixels of 1440p)! It takes a lot of bandwidth to drive that many pixels smoothly at 60 Hz and more so at 120 Hz.

Even 4K gaming monitors struggle to hit ultra-high rates (240 Hz+) without using Display Stream Compression, which degrades image quality subtly. That doesn't matter for gaming and consumer production, but creative professionals are generally not going to use monitors like that.

Apple also prioritizes 'Retina' pixel density (218 PPI) and color accuracy because their target audience is designers and editors, not competitive gamers. For them, text clarity and color-matching matter more than hitting 240 Hz. Again, to make everything run fluidly at 5K (27") or 6K (32") requires high bandwidth. Thunderbolt 5 can finally drive something like a 6K monitor at 120 Hz with room to spare.

To be fair in a comparison, please provide links to gaming monitors that have the color accuracy, brightness, viewing angles, and other features for people working in photography, graphic design, or video that match productivity monitors like the Studio Display. How many of them have Thunderbolt connectivity and nice plug-and-play connectivity with Macs?

If you want a gaming monitor, the good news is you can buy one. I have one attached to my Mac Mini. If you want a monitor geared towards creative professionals (I also have one attached to my Mac Mini), buy one of those. It's important though to understand what the monitors do and do not do. Buy what you need if the Studio Display is not for you.
Score: 18 Votes (Like | Disagree)
iamgalt Avatar
2 days ago at 07:29 am
I get that thunderbolt is great in that it's got a lot of bandwidth and can deliver power, but it would be nice to have at least one HDMI port. Preferably two or three. There are computers out there that don't have thunderbolt ports. Put a couple of HDMI ports on there and it'll most likely be an instant buy for me.
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
M4irmidnight Avatar
2 days ago at 07:30 am

A19 Pro chip inside - If it runs some sort of macOS, instabuy.
Wouldn’t it then be an iMac ? Rather than Studio Display.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Veinticinco Avatar
2 days ago at 07:35 am
Wouldn’t surprise me to see them mothball the Pro XDR display and revert to this two-tier Studio Display offering.

Nobody is spending 6000 euro on the former display, but spending around 2.5k or the equivalent price as the Mac Studio to marry it to, isn’t that difficult to justify.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Veinticinco Avatar
2 days ago at 07:37 am
For the high spec model, 90Hz is typical penny pinching though. Should be 120Hz in this day and age, given the price point and competition.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Related Apple News: Health | Opinion | South Africa | Politics | World News