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Apple’s Studio Display XDR will need a pretty new Mac or iPad to run at 120Hz

The full ProMotion experience is reserved for the latest Apple silicon, including the M5 iPad Pro and newer MacBooks.

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Apple‘s new Studio Display XDR is here, and it’s a beast. The 27-inch 5K screen hits 2000 nits of peak brightness, uses a mini-LED backlight with thousands of dimming zones, and finally brings a 120Hz refresh rate to Apple’s pro monitor lineup.

But there is a fine print problem. That silky ProMotion experience won’t run on most existing Macs and iPads. You’ll need very specific hardware to get the full 120Hz.

Which devices get the full 120Hz

Apple’s compatibility list draws a hard line. The M5 iPad Pro is the only tablet that can drive the Studio Display XDR at 120Hz. Every other iPad, including the M4 iPad Pro and recent iPad Air models, maxes out at 60Hz when connected.

Mac support follows the same pattern. Machines with M1, M2, or M3 chips work with the display, but only at up to 60Hz. You’ll likely need an M4 or M5 chip to hit 120Hz. The new M5 MacBook Pro models announced this week are your safest bet. All devices also require macOS TaHoE 26.3.1 or iPadOS 26.3.1.

Why the refresh rate matters for pros

This isn’t just about smoother scrolling. The 120Hz refresh rate, combined with Adaptive Sync, makes a real difference when you’re scrubbing through video timelines or playing back graphically intense content. For filmmakers and 3D animators, that responsiveness translates to better creative decisions.

The display also introduces new DICOM medical imaging presets for diagnostic radiology, though that feature is pending FDA clearance. Radiologists will need to pair it with a compatible viewer once the calibrator becomes available.

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The $3,299 price tag stings more when you realize you might need a new computer to unlock the display’s best feature. An M1 Max MacBook Pro from 2021 will drive it just fine, but you won’t get ProMotion.

What to check before you pre-order

Pre-orders open today, March 4, with units arriving March 11. The Thunderbolt 5 connection delivers up to 140W of charging power, enough to fast-charge a 16-inch MacBook Pro, and two extra USB-C ports let the display act as a hub.

The standard Studio Display starts at $1,599 and includes the same 12MP Center Stage camera and Thunderbolt 5 connectivity, with up to 96W of charging power. It’s a solid option if you don’t need XDR features or 120Hz.

For buyers who need that full ProMotion experience, the path is clear. You’ll want an M5 iPad Pro or a new MacBook Pro with an M5 Pro or M5 Max chip. If you’re on older M-series hardware, the display still makes sense as a future-proof investment. Just know that buttery smooth scrolling will have to wait.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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