It also marked Apple’s return to the ARM architecture after remaining faithful to the x86 ecosystem championed by Intel for over a decade. I'm not going to say it never makes sense, like that other poster above who knows he's going to break his accessories and can take advantage of it, but you have to know that you're going to use it.Apple launched the first of the new M1 MacBook models late last year and the biggest change was the move to a chip designed by Apple. I get the peace of mind angle, but I think the math paints a different picture and only works if you actually take advantage of it on every device you ever get with the warranty. The only way it makes sense is if you break your device every time within the AppleCare period.
The second you've bought AppleCare and don't put it to use during that period that it's valid is the second you've come out behind and have likely ended up paying more over the long run. You're out $100 more and the only way that AppleCare makes you come out ahead is if you both break your devices. If both of you bought AppleCare, your total cost would be about $600 where as if neither of you bought it, then you paid the $500.
Price of applecare for macbook pro pro#
Not sure which MacBook you and your wife had/have but AppleCare+ is $250 on the 13" MacBook Pro and the cost to repair the screen is $99. I get the peace of mind aspect of it, but unless you know you're rough on your devices or clumsy enough that you know you're going to break it, then the math usually doesn't end up working out for you over time. So if you add up all the extended warranties you pay for it to not end up failing, usually you're spending more on warranties than the single repair that you might need. If it makes it past the first year, it's not very likely to fail within the extended warranty period. In general, extended warranties aren't worth it because if something is going to fail, it's likely going to happen in the first year which the existing warranty already covers. It really was not worth the money unless you knew for sure you were going to break your phone since you were better off keeping that money and setting it aside.
Price of applecare for macbook pro plus#
So if you knew for sure you were going to break your phone at some point, then yes, you should get it otherwise the cost of AppleCare plus the cost of the repair since you still need to pay money for that, plus the cost of AppleCare on your next phone ends up costing you more money than paying out for the repair without it.
The way the math added up is that you had to break your iPhone every time in order for it to be worth it. The most common issue and one of the more expensive repairs was is if you damaged the screen. I haven't done the math lately, but this for a long time wasn't the case with iPhones. So yeah, what do you think? Did you get the insurance and why? The Macbook will be mostly used inside and the occasional library or cafe or something. I did get it on my iPad Pro though since that's more mobile and I can see it possibly falling and breaking when I use it outside. I'm not really prone to breaking laptops since the only one I really broke was one where I stressed it pretty hard by playing games on it constantly and one where I accidentally knocked over (but still worked after. Never had a MacBook before so I'm not sure if it's worth it or not. The thing that's stopping me is the price since it's around $280CAD+tax/$240CAD+tax (education discount and that's been recently discounted too) and the price of the deductible is $130+tax for screen repairs and $380+tax for other damage which is pretty expensive especially since it's on top of the base price, I think. I've been debating about this for a while now and can't decide to get it or not since I'm not sure how reliable Macbooks are.