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M2 vs. M5 Vision Pro: 20+ Differences Compared

Apple recently refreshed its Vision Pro headset with the M5 chip, but how different is it from the original version? This guide lists all of the differences between the two models.

Vision Pro M5 Demo
While the latest model sees no hardware changes beyond the chip and the headband, the M5 chip unlocks a series of new capabilities for the Vision Pro, such as a higher refresh rate, more rendered pixels, and longer battery life.

The M5 Vision Pro isn't classified as a second-generation model, which reveals how incremental Apple sees the update over the original M2 version. Nevertheless, it refines the headset in specific ways. All of the differences between the two models are as follows:

Apple Vision Pro (2024) ‌Apple Vision Pro‌ (2025)
Apple ‌M2‌ chip Apple M5 chip
Made with TSMC's second-generation 5nm node (N5P) Made with TSMC's second-generation 3nm process (N3P)
Based on A15 Bionic chip from iPhone 13 (2021) Based on A19 Pro chip from iPhone 17 Pro (2025)
8-core CPU (4 performance and 4 efficiency cores) 10-core CPU (4 performance and 6 efficiency cores)
New GPU architecture
Integrated Neural Accelerator in every GPU core
Metal 4 developer APIs Metal 4 developer APIs with Tensor APIs to program GPU Neural Accelerators
Third-generation ray tracing engine
Hardware-accelerated mesh shading
Second-generation dynamic caching
LPDDR5 memory LPDDR5X memory
100 GB/s memory bandwidth 153 GB/s memory bandwidth
Support for AV1 decode
Dedicated display engine
10% more rendered pixels
Up to 100Hz refresh rate Up to 120Hz refresh rate
2–2.5 hours battery life 2.5–3 hours battery life
30W power adapter included 40W power adapter included
Solo Knit Band and Dual Loop Band included Counterweighted Dual Knit Band included
Weighs 600–650 grams (21.2–22.9 ounces) Weighs 750–800 grams (26.4–28.2 ounces)
Made in China Made in Vietnam
Released February 2024 Released October 2025
Started at $3,499 (£3,499 or €4,000) Starts at $3,499 (£3,199 or €3,700)

The new chip is dramatically more powerful and efficient, making the device tangibly faster at tasks that push multiple subsystems at once, such as creating spatial photos or loading widget-heavy environments. Latency is reduced and overall responsiveness improves enough to feel noticeable in daily use. While there aren't many workflows that can take full advantage of the M5 chip's capabilities, it provides considerable performance headroom and strengthens the headset's technical foundation for future versions of visionOS and third-party apps.

That said, the upgrade is still bound by the same cameras, sensors, and displays as the ‌M2‌ model. The new 120 Hz refresh rate and 10% increase in rendered pixels subtly enhance motion smoothness and realism, but they don't transform the experience. Battery life is also slightly better, yet none of these shifts make the ‌M2‌ version feel obsolete. The software remains identical across both models, and since the new Dual Knit Band is available separately, comfort is also not a differentiator.

For current owners, the decision to upgrade hinges on use-case. Developers, designers, or professionals who push the headset to its limits will appreciate the added headroom and smoother responsiveness. For everyone else—especially those who primarily use the Vision Pro for watching TV and movies, Mac Virtual Display, browsing, or light productivity—the ‌M2‌ version still delivers the same fundamental experience.

The ‌M2‌ model's secondary-market prices also change the equation. With no trade-in program and units now listed on eBay at substantially lower prices, the original Vision Pro has become a far more accessible entry point into Apple's spatial computing experience. That makes the M5 model the better option for new buyers who want the most longevity and headroom, but the ‌M2‌ model remains better value for those entering the platform for the first time or waiting for a larger generational leap.

Related Roundup: Apple Vision Pro
Buyer's Guide: Vision Pro (Buy Now)
Related Forum: Apple Vision Pro

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Top Rated Comments

20 weeks ago

But still lacking usefulness... I know several people who bought them but not a single person who continues to use it on a regular basis. The Steve Reality Distortion Field continues to remain the strongest feature.
Head over to Reddit and you'll find account from many people who use it routinely for a variety of cases and continue to be happy with our purchases.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
20 weeks ago

They made it HEAVIER! Going in the wrong direction folks.
The difference is due to counterweights in the new dual knit head band, not the device. I haven't tried the band with my M2 yet, but those who have or have bought the M5 VP say it makes a significant improvement in comfort. That's not the wrong direction.
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Hajj.david Avatar
20 weeks ago

They made it HEAVIER! Going in the wrong direction folks.
The AVP itself is not heavier. The "increased weight" is 100% in the counter weights of the dual knit band. Its far more comfortable to wear and it just feels like wearing big glasses now.

But still lacking usefulness... I know several people who bought them but not a single person who continues to use it on a regular basis. The Steve Reality Distortion Field continues to remain the strongest feature.
I use mine every single day for hours a day. Its the number one productivity tool if you want to go to a quiet space and work in peace. At night I lay in bed and watch movies / shows on the ceiling with it.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
DonutHands Avatar
20 weeks ago
Bruh, 15 of those differences are the same as saying M2 vs M5
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
20 weeks ago

I'm sure the new strap is more comfortable, but it also looks a lot more dorky too. I feel they'll abandon this at some point in favor of glasses with screens. Even then, I'm not convinced this will be the future as typical monitors allow for more ambient movement between activities...
I think it's fairly obvious that the AVP is a prototype for a potential future pair of true AR glasses, and I bought mine with full understanding of that.

It's interesting to me that instead of releasing a compromised pair of glasses that does the spatial computing thing in a limited way, Apple decided to release what's effectively a prototype that is huge and limited but provides an experience much closer to what the actual viable product will in theory eventually be when the technology catches up. I, personally, prefer that they went that way with it.

As for whether spatial computing is a thing people really want, once it gets "there" technologically, I'm not sure, but having used one for a little while it's at least possible. Not for all use cases, I think, but for some. The missing piece at this point is shared reality; if you have two people wearing an AVP, they don't both see the same objects in the same spots in the room. If/when that eventually exists, the potential use case increases pretty dramatically.

From a pure productivity standpoint the virtual monitor feature of the AVP as-exists is its killer feature--I don't care how dorky it looks, I can now carry a dual-5K ultra wide wraparound screen for my laptop as a personal item on a plane. Perhaps there's a future where AR glasses effectively replace monitors, you just sit in front of a keyboard and mouse and your monitor is on your head.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
maerz001 Avatar
20 weeks ago
So the first 10 differences are from the M5 chip. And on top of that the release date counts also? Seriously?
If you mention different release seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks you will manage to find 30 differences soon
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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