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Apple is reportedly planning a redesigned MacBook Pro with OLED, touchscreen support, and a Dynamic Island-style cutout, expected in 2026.
Apple may be preparing one of the biggest changes in MacBook Pro history. According to a new Bloomberg report, the company is actively developing a redesigned MacBook Pro featuring an OLED display, touchscreen support, and a Dynamic Island-style camera cutout.
While the upgrade is still more than a year away, the rumored changes suggest Apple is slowly reshaping how users interact with macOS without turning the Mac into an iPad.
The upcoming MacBook Pro models are said to replace the current display notch with a Dynamic Island-like design paired with a hole-punch camera. Unlike the static notch used today, the Dynamic Island could expand and adapt based on system activity, notifications, and app interactions.
This change would free up additional screen space while introducing a more interactive interface element that blends hardware and software functionality.
Apple has historically resisted touchscreen laptops, arguing that vertical displays are not ideal for prolonged touch use. Its earlier attempt at introducing touch interaction through the Touch Bar ultimately failed to gain traction and was later removed.
This time, Apple reportedly plans to treat touch as an optional input method rather than positioning the MacBook Pro as a tablet replacement.
Users will be able to tap interface elements directly on the display, with menus and controls adjusting based on how they interact with the system. Larger touch targets and familiar gestures like pinch-to-zoom and fast scrolling could make navigation feel more natural while keeping the traditional desktop experience intact.
While touchscreen support may grab headlines, the shift to OLED displays could have a bigger long-term impact.
OLED panels offer deeper blacks, improved contrast, and better HDR performance compared to current mini-LED displays. The technology may also improve power efficiency and enable a thinner display assembly, allowing Apple to slightly slim down the MacBook Pro while maintaining its existing 14-inch and 16-inch sizes.
Bloomberg reports that Apple could release two MacBook Pro updates in 2026. An earlier refresh powered by M5 Pro and M5 Max chips may arrive in spring, followed later by the redesigned OLED MacBook Pro models featuring next-generation M6 Pro and M6 Max chips built on a new 2-nanometer process.
While still early in development, the rumored changes suggest Apple may finally be ready to evolve how users interact with Macs.
Would you use touch controls on a MacBook Pro with Dynamic Island, or stick with the keyboard and trackpad? Share your thoughts in the comments.