Apple MacBook Neo installment promo Home Credit REVU Philippines

Apple MacBook Neo for ₱44 a day? Preorder it from Home Credit PH

In Laptops by Alora Uy GuerreroLeave a Comment

Apple just flipped the laptop market on its head with the Apple MacBook Neo, a colorful, ₱39,990 (roughly $667) entry-level machine that borrows its brains from the iPhone 16 Pro. If you’ve been holding out for an affordable Mac, the barrier to entry just got even lower. Home Credit is rolling out an aggressive preorder promo in the Philippines, letting you walk away with the new laptop for as little as ₱44 ($0.73) a day.

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The deal: 0% interest, minimal friction

If dropping 40 grand all at once isn’t your vibe, Home Credit’s early-access offer spreads the pain into highly manageable chunks. The nationwide preorder runs strictly from April 11 to April 23. Buyers can take advantage of 0% interest and flexible payment terms stretching up to 24 months.

Here is how the math breaks down (assuming a required 30% down payment):

  • 256GB model: ₱82 ($1.37) per day on a 12-month plan, or only ₱44 ($0.73) per day for 24 months.
  • 512GB model: ₱97 ($1.62) per day on a 12-month plan, or ₱51 ($0.85) per day for 24 months.

The approval process is built for speed. You only need one valid ID, and Home Credit claims approvals can happen in as fast as one minute before a representative guides you through the rest of the process.

What is the Apple MacBook Neo?

Apple’s new laptop is a calculated, fascinating compromise designed explicitly for the education market and budget-conscious buyers. Instead of an M Series chip, the MacBook Neo is powered by the A18 Pro, a six-core CPU and three-core GPU setup paired with a fixed 8GB of memory. It’s not a heavy-duty rendering rig, but it’s more than enough to tear through Chrome tabs, document editing, and casual creative work whether you’re at a cafe, a coworking space, or on campus.

You still get a gorgeous 13-inch Liquid Retina display, a fanless aluminum chassis, and up to 16 hours of battery life. Plus, it brings some much-needed personality back to the Mac lineup, dropping in four bold colors: silver, blush, citrus, and indigo.

MacBook Neo unboxing video

To hit that rock-bottom price, Apple made some unorthodox hardware choices. MagSafe is gone. You’re left with two USB-C ports for charging and connectivity, and strangely, they are asymmetrical — one supports USB 3, while the other is relegated to USB 2 speeds.

More importantly, the base 256GB model completely ditches Touch ID. If you want biometric login, you have to upgrade to the 512GB configuration, which honestly makes Home Credit’s ₱51 ($0.85)-a-day installment plan for the higher storage tier look a lot more appealing. The display also tops out at 500 nits and covers the sRGB color space rather than the wider P3 gamut found on the Air and Pro, and the webcam is a standard 1080p sensor.

Where to buy one

If the MacBook Neo fits your workflow, you can lock in the preorder at Apple Authorized Resellers and Home Credit partner stores nationwide. The list of participating retailers includes Abenson, Aerophone, Beyond the Box, Blue Box, Cell Boy, Digimap, Electroworld, Fone Style, Gadget Headz, Greentelcom, Inbox Stores PH, Laycom, Octagon, PC Express, Power Mac Center, Puerto Electronico, Silicon Valley, thinkingtools@mall, The Loop, Wiltelcom, and 8telcom.

You can also download the Home Credit App on Google Play, the App Store, or Huawei AppGallery to get preapproved before walking into the store.

For students, young professionals, or anyone tired of lugging around a clunky old Windows machine, the Apple MacBook Neo is already a solid long-term investment. Breaking it down to the price of an affordable cup of coffee per day? That just makes it a no-brainer.


Learn About This Author

Alora Uy Guerrero

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Editor-in-chief: Alora Uy Guerrero is a 24-year media veteran who has survived the newsrooms of giants like Yahoo and a high-stakes detour into OPPO's digital marketing. She eventually returned to her journalism roots to helm REVU. A strict advocate for quality over quantity, Alora lives by a family-first philosophy — mostly because her babies are the only bosses she can't negotiate with. When she isn't chasing kids or deadlines, she's probably traveling, shooting, or passionately over-analyzing her favorite bands, films, and basketball teams.