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Apple M4 Max (16 cores) vs Apple M4 (9 cores) vs Apple M4 (10 cores)

Apple M4 Max (16 cores)

► remove from comparison

The 16-core Apple M4 Max is a powerful ARM architecture processor (SoC) for laptops and mini-PCs that debuted in Sep 2024. It features 12 performance CPU cores running at well over 4 GHz along with 4 efficient cores running at under 3 GHz. The 40-core M4 Max GPU and at least 48 GB of fast 546 GB/s LPDDR5x on-package memory depending on the configuration are included as well, as is USB 4 and Thunderbolt 5 support.

The built-in 16 core neural engine (up to 38 TOPS) is found across the whole M4 chip family. Furthermore, all M4 processors are thought to be based on the ARM v9.4-A architecture to a certain degree.

Performance

The M4 Max is set to be just around 15% faster than the 16-core M3 Max. This is very, very impressive.

Graphics

The 40-core M4 Max GPU has hardware support for ray tracing as well as mesh shading and other modern technologies. It supports external displays with resolutions as high as "8K" and it can HW-decode a few popular video codecs such as h.264, h.265 and AV1.

Its gaming performance is set to be about as good the GeForce RTX 4070 Laptop. Please keep in mind that very few games have been compiled specifically for Apple silicon Macs meaning most titles have to be run via emulation layers. Some of them are displayed with visual artefacts as a result, or don't start at all.

Power consumption

To let so many CPU and GPU cores breathe, some really high TDP figures are required. We assume the chip consumes 90 W to 100 W when under full load.

The 2nd generation 3 nm TSMC process the M4 Max is built with delivers good power efficiency, as of late 2024.

Apple M4 (9 cores)

► remove from comparison Apple M4 (9 cores)

The 9-core Apple M4 is a rather fast ARM architecture processor (SoC) that sports 9 CPU cores, a 16-core neural engine and a 10-core GPU with hardware RT support and other modern features. Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3 as well as Thunderbolt 3 and USB 4 are all onboard, too. The M4 debuted in May 2024 as part of an iPad launch event; it has 3 performance cores running at a clock speed of up to 4.3 GHz and 6 efficient cores running at way under 3 GHz whereas the M3 (10 GPU cores) has 4 performance cores and 4 efficiency cores.

The faster 10-core M4 chip delivers 10% higher multi-thread performance and 15% higher graphics performance, to give you a rough figure. More importantly, the 10-core M4 can be had in systems with an active cooling solution, such as Fall 2024 MacBook Pros, whereas the 9-core one is an iPad Pro exclusive. Systems with a fan deliver much higher sustained performance than the ones without it.

Architecture and Features

The new CPU cores run at faster clock speeds than what the M3 was capable of and they also feature minor architectural improvements. The CPU cores are thought to be based on the ARM v9.4-A microarchitecture to a certain degree. The M4 comes with 16 GB or more (depending on the SKU) of on-package LPDDR5x-7500 RAM whereas the M3 was limited to 6400 MT/s. The updated NPU delivers up to 38 TOPS of performance for AI workloads.

Performance

Single-thread performance, multi-thread performance and NPU performance all got a noticeable boost compared to what we had with the M3 (10 GPU cores). The new processor is about 11% faster than the M3 in short-term multi-thread workloads while besting every M3 series chip possible in single-thread tasks by a comfortable margin. Geekbench 6.2 Multi puts the 9-core M4 right above the Core i9-13900H and the Ryzen 7 7840HS; in fact, the M4 is just 3% slower than Intel's top-of-the-line Core Ultra 9 185H chip. A 13% to 18% single-thread performance improvement over M3 series chips is evident if we look at Mozilla's Kraken test results. Octane V2 seems to think the M4 is just 4% slower than Intel's mighty Core i9-14900HX. CrossMark results suggest the M4 is about as fast as the Core i9-13900H.

The 10-core M4 is about 10% faster in multi-threaded tasks than the 9-core part is. It also delivers just slightly higher single-thread performance.

While Apple undoubtedly deserves some praise for what it managed to do here, it is important to highlight that all of the tests we did involve short-term workloads only. The M4 will suffer from heavy throttling if subjected to long-term workloads as there is no active cooling inside that super-thin iPad Pro case.

Graphics

The M4 GPU (10 cores) has hardware support for ray tracing as well as mesh shading and other modern technologies. It supports external displays with resolutions as high as "8K".

As far as performance is concerned, it appears the 9-core M4's GPU runs at significantly lower clock speeds than the (otherwise the same) GPU built into the 10-core M4 chip. This leads to a disappointing situation where what's supposedly a newer graphics adapter is about 10% slower than the 10-core GPU built into the M3. Still, this M4 GPU delivers very decent benchmark scores that put it in the same ballpark as the Radeon RX 6500M.

Power consumption

The chip's sustained power consumption is limited to ~7 W, with short-term peaks of up to 14 W possible.

The chip is built with a "second generation" 3 nm TSMC process that's still cutting-edge as of late 2024.

Apple M4 (10 cores)

► remove from comparison Apple M4 (10 cores)

The 10-core Apple M4 is an impressively fast ARM architecture processor (SoC) sporting 4 performance and 6 efficient CPU cores along with a 16-core neural engine and a 10-core GPU with hardware RT support and other modern features. On-package 7500 MT/s LPDDR5x RAM, USB 4 support and Thunderbolt 4 support are onboard as well, as are Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3.

The M4 debuted in May 2024 as part of an iPad launch event; its 4 performance cores run at up to 4.4 GHz, representing a healthy improvement over the M3 (10-core GPU) and its 4.06 GHz top clock speed. Besides, this new chip also has 6 efficient cores at its disposal that run at up to 2.9 GHz. The M3 had to make do with 4 performance cores and 4 efficient cores, for reference.

Architecture and Features

The new CPU cores run at faster clock speeds than what the M3 was capable of while also featuring some minor architectural improvements. A heavily customized version of ARM's v9.4-A microarchitecture is reportedly employed here. The M4 comes with on-package LPDDR5x-7500 RAM (120 GB/s) whereas the M3 was limited to 6400 MT/s. The updated NPU delivers up to 38 TOPS of performance for AI workloads.

Performance

In 2024 iPad Pros, the 3 nm chip is 10% to 20% faster than the M3 (10 GPU cores) in both multi-thread and single-thread short-term workloads. It also delivers about 10% higher multi-thread performance than the 9-core M4. This puts the 10-core part on an equal footing with the Ryzen 7 7745HX, Core i7-13705H and other higher-end x86 processors released in 2023 and 2024.

iPad Pros come with no active cooling solution however Mac minis and MacBook Pros do have one and the latest iMacs probably do as well. As our Fall 2024 Mac mini review shows, the M4's short-term performance doesn't benefit much from the presence of a fan, however its sustained performance benefits tremendously.

Graphics

The M4 GPU (10 cores) has hardware support for ray tracing as well as mesh shading and other modern technologies. It supports external displays with resolutions as high as 8K.

The graphics adapter runs at higher clock speeds than what the (otherwise identical) 10-core GPU built into the 9-core M4 can muster. As our Mac mini 2024 review confirmed, its performance is good enough to run many 2023 and 2024 games at 1080p on low or medium quality settings.

Much like it is with CPU performance, M4-powered iPad Pros will be much slower in long-term GPU-intensive workloads than iMacs, Mac minis and MacBook Pros due to the lack of proper cooling.

Power consumption

This specific M4 chip is found in 2024 iPad Pros, 2024 iMacs, 2024 Mac minis and 2024 MacBook Pros. Within the thin metal cases of the iPads - no active cooling - the chip's sustained power consumption hovers in the 4 W - 5 W area, with short-term peaks of up to 14 W possible. However, Mac minis and MacBook Pros do have an active cooling solution (and the new iMacs probably do, too) meaning the power consumption figures are several times higher. In our Fall 2024 Mac mini review, the SoC consumed 30 W to 40 W when under high loads.

The M4 is built with a "second generation" 3 nm TSMC process which is still cutting-edge as of late 2024.

ModelApple M4 Max (16 cores)Apple M4 (9 cores)Apple M4 (10 cores)
SeriesApple M4Apple M4Apple M4
Series: M4
Apple M4 Max (16 cores) « 2.59 - 4.51 GHz16 / 16 cores
Apple M4 Max (14 cores)2.59 - 4.51 GHz14 / 14 cores
Apple M4 Pro (14 cores)2.59 - 4.51 GHz14 / 14 cores
Apple M4 Pro (12 cores)2.59 - 4.51 GHz12 / 12 cores
Apple M4 (10 cores)2.89 - 4.46 GHz10 / 10 cores
Apple M4 (9 cores)2.9 - 4.4 GHz9 / 9 cores
Apple M4 (8 cores)2.9 - 4 GHz8 / 8 cores
Apple M4 Max (16 cores)2.59 - 4.51 GHz16 / 16 cores
Apple M4 Max (14 cores)2.59 - 4.51 GHz14 / 14 cores
Apple M4 Pro (14 cores)2.59 - 4.51 GHz14 / 14 cores
Apple M4 Pro (12 cores)2.59 - 4.51 GHz12 / 12 cores
Apple M4 (10 cores)2.89 - 4.46 GHz10 / 10 cores
Apple M4 (9 cores) « 2.9 - 4.4 GHz9 / 9 cores
Apple M4 (8 cores)2.9 - 4 GHz8 / 8 cores
Apple M4 Max (16 cores)2.59 - 4.51 GHz16 / 16 cores
Apple M4 Max (14 cores)2.59 - 4.51 GHz14 / 14 cores
Apple M4 Pro (14 cores)2.59 - 4.51 GHz14 / 14 cores
Apple M4 Pro (12 cores)2.59 - 4.51 GHz12 / 12 cores
Apple M4 (10 cores) « 2.89 - 4.46 GHz10 / 10 cores
Apple M4 (9 cores)2.9 - 4.4 GHz9 / 9 cores
Apple M4 (8 cores)2.9 - 4 GHz8 / 8 cores
Clock2592 - 4512 MHz2900 - 4400 MHz2890 - 4464 MHz
L2 Cache4 MB4 MB4 MB
Cores / Threads16 / 16
12 x 4.5 GHz Apple M4 P-Core
4 x 2.6 GHz Apple M4 E-Core
9 / 9
3 x 4.4 GHz Apple M4 P-Core
6 x 2.9 GHz Apple M4 E-Core
10 / 10
4 x 4.5 GHz Apple M4 P-Core
6 x 2.9 GHz Apple M4 E-Core
TDP90 Watt9 Watt40 Watt
Technology3 nm3 nm3 nm
FeaturesUnified Memory LPDDR5X-8533 (546 GB/s), 16-Core Neural Engine, Dual Media Engine (Encoding / Decoding: H.264, HEVC, ProRes, ProRes RAW, AV1 Decoding only)Unified Memory LPDDR5X-7500 (120 GB/s), 16-Core Neural Engine, Media Engine (Encoding / Decoding: H.264, HEVC, ProRes, ProRes RAW, AV1 Decoding only)Unified Memory LPDDR5X-7500 (120 GB/s), 16-Core Neural Engine, Media Engine (Encoding / Decoding: H.264, HEVC, ProRes, ProRes RAW, AV1 Decoding only)
iGPUApple M4 Max 40-Core GPUApple M4 10-core GPUApple M4 10-core GPU
ArchitectureARMARMARM
Announced
TDP Turbo PL214 Watt40 Watt
Transistors28 Million

Benchmarks

Cinebench 2024 - Cinebench 2024 CPU Single Core
178 Points (100%)
min: 173     avg: 174.2     median: 174 (98%)     max: 177 Points
Cinebench 2024 - Cinebench 2024 CPU Multi Core
min: 2015     avg: 2042     median: 2042 (38%)     max: 2069 Points
min: 815     avg: 921     median: 958 (18%)     max: 986 Points
Cinebench R23 - Cinebench R23 Multi Core
27595 Points (26%)
min: 12335     avg: 13338     median: 13833 (13%)     max: 13845 Points
Cinebench R23 - Cinebench R23 Single Core
2209 Points (94%)
min: 2165     avg: 2202     median: 2173 (92%)     max: 2269 Points
Cinebench R20 - Cinebench R20 CPU (Single Core)
563 Points (62%)
565 Points (63%)
Cinebench R20 - Cinebench R20 CPU (Multi Core)
6995 Points (17%)
3642 Points (9%)
Cinebench R15 - Cinebench R15 CPU Multi 64 Bit
3647 Points (23%)
min: 1901     avg: 1907     median: 1907 (12%)     max: 1913 Points
Cinebench R15 - Cinebench R15 CPU Single 64 Bit
307 Points (86%)
min: 300     avg: 302     median: 302 (85%)     max: 304 Points
Blender - Blender 3.3 Classroom CPU *
167 Seconds (2%)
min: 389     avg: 397     median: 397 (5%)     max: 405 Seconds
Geekbench 6.4 - Geekbench 6.4 Single-Core
3880 Points (97%)
3662 Points (91%)
min: 3655     avg: 3747     median: 3748.5 (94%)     max: 3838 Points
Geekbench 6.4 - Geekbench 6.4 Multi-Core
25760 Points (100%)
13350 Points (52%)
min: 14690     avg: 14978     median: 14987.5 (58%)     max: 15173 Points
Mozilla Kraken 1.1 - Kraken 1.1 Total Score *
256.2 ms (0%)
325.6 ms (0%)
min: 262     avg: 277.7     median: 265.4 (0%)     max: 318.8 ms
Octane V2 - Octane V2 Total Score
116813 Points (90%)
105035 Points (81%)
min: 105178     avg: 111471     median: 110817 (85%)     max: 118492 Points
WebXPRT 4 - WebXPRT 4 Score
353 Points (97%)
min: 315     avg: 335     median: 334 (92%)     max: 348 Points
WebXPRT 3 - WebXPRT 3 Score
543 Points (97%)
414 Points (74%)
min: 430     avg: 467.6     median: 478 (86%)     max: 482 Points
Antutu v10 - AnTuTu v10 Total Score
2547450 Points (84%)
2716980 Points (90%)
Antutu v10 - AnTuTu v10 CPU
696637 Points (20%)
743583 Points (22%)
CrossMark - CrossMark Overall
2255 Points (84%)
1880 Points (70%)
min: 1944     avg: 2015     median: 2038 (76%)     max: 2066 Points
Power Consumption - Geekbench 5.5 Power Consumption 150cd *
9.8 Watt (4%)
6.8 Watt (3%)
Power Consumption - Idle Power Consumption - external Monitor *
6 Watt (4%)
min: 2.68     avg: 3.1     median: 2.8 (2%)     max: 4.09 Watt
Power Consumption - Idle Power Consumption 150cd 1min *
7.3 Watt (8%)
4.2 Watt (5%)
min: 2.68     avg: 3.9     median: 4.1 (5%)     max: 4.76 Watt

Average Benchmarks Apple M4 Max (16 cores) → 100% n=6

Average Benchmarks Apple M4 (9 cores) → 79% n=6

Average Benchmarks Apple M4 (10 cores) → 87% n=6

- Range of benchmark values for this graphics card
red legend - Average benchmark values for this graphics card
* Smaller numbers mean a higher performance
1 This benchmark is not used for the average calculation

v1.33
log 29. 21:14:29

#0 ran 0s before starting gpusingle class +0s ... 0s

#1 checking url part for id 18560 +0s ... 0s

#2 checking url part for id 17540 +0s ... 0s

#3 checking url part for id 17538 +0s ... 0s

#4 not redirecting to Ajax server +0s ... 0s

#5 did not recreate cache, as it is less than 5 days old! Created at Mon, 28 Apr 2025 05:16:39 +0200 +0s ... 0s

#6 composed specs +0.007s ... 0.007s

#7 did output specs +0s ... 0.007s

#8 getting avg benchmarks for device 18560 +0s ... 0.008s

#9 got single benchmarks 18560 +0s ... 0.008s

#10 getting avg benchmarks for device 17540 +0s ... 0.008s

#11 got single benchmarks 17540 +0s ... 0.008s

#12 getting avg benchmarks for device 17538 +0s ... 0.009s

#13 got single benchmarks 17538 +0.006s ... 0.015s

#14 got avg benchmarks for devices +0s ... 0.015s

#15 min, max, avg, median took s +0.014s ... 0.029s

#16 return log +0s ... 0.029s

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> Expert Reviews and News on Laptops, Smartphones and Tech Innovations > Benchmarks / Tech > Processor Comparison - Head 2 Head
Redaktion, 2017-09- 8 (Update: 2023-07- 1)