Apple's brand-new iPad Pro keeps getting cheaper on Amazon
SAVE $55: As of May 29, the new 11-inch, space black Apple iPad Pro (M4, 256GB, WiFi) is on sale on Amazon for just $944 — its lowest price since launch.
If you've been eyeing a new tablet, now's a great time to buy one thanks to a deal on the M4 Apple iPad Pro at Amazon. Amazon continues to make Apple's powerful new tablet a tempting buy: after discounting the base configuration of the latest 11-inch iPad Pro by $50 on its release date, the retail giant now has it listed for an additional $5 off.
As of May 29, the Apple iPad Pro (M4, 256GB, WiFi) is on sale for the all-time low price of $944 (normally $999) and beats a concurrent members-only deal at Best Buy. (If you could benefit from a little more screen real estate, note that the 13-inch version is $50 off.) Some fine print: This new sale pricing only applied to the space black variant at the time of writing — the silver one was still hovering at $949.
The revamped iPad Pro has an impressively slim design — the 11-inch model is only 0.21 inches thin and 0.98 pounds — which Apple has adorned with a rich, bright OLED display and a cutting-edge M4 chip. (In our testing, it left the M3 MacBooks in the dust and lasted over 16 hours in a single charge.) Its Ultra Wide 12MP webcam also has a new location for use in landscape orientation.
Mashable Tech Editor Kim Gedeon recommends the new iPad Pro for two specific types of users: one being a professional creative who frequently works on the go, and the other being an Apple loyalist with cash to burn. More casual users in search of a fresh tablet for browsing and streaming will probably be better off with the new iPad Air (which also happens to be on sale, by the way).
Haley Henschel is a Chicago-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable who reviews and finds deals on popular tech, from laptops to gaming consoles and VPNs. She has years of experience covering shopping holidays and can tell you what’s actually worth buying on Black Friday and Amazon Prime Day. Her work has also explored the driving forces behind digital trends within the shopping sphere, from dupes to 12-foot skeletons.