Geared more to everyday Mac users than the video production studios and graphic arts professionals that are the target audience of the now-discontinued Apple Pro Display XDR and its replacement, the Studio Display XDR, the Studio Display pairs well with Mac Studio desktops as well as MacBooks and iMacs. It even works with iPhones and iPads (provided that they have a USB-C port) and the MacBook Neo, though with some performance limitations. It’s also compatible with Windows computers—provided they have either a Thunderbolt port or a USB-C port that supports DisplayPort over USB Alt Mode—but a few features may be disabled.
(Credit: Joseph Maldonado)
As with nearly every Apple product, the Studio Display is a thing of beauty. The aluminum chassis has a sleek, silvery look, and the monitor is sturdy, finely crafted, and well-proportioned. With the tilt-only stand, which I will discuss shortly, the monitor measures 18.8 by 24.5 by 6.6 inches and weighs 13.9 pounds.
The Studio Display’s screen is a 27-inch (measured diagonally) 5K Retina display with a resolution of 5,120 by 2,880 pixels and a pixel density of 218 pixels per inch (ppi). Its 600-nit luminance rating is the highest we have seen on a non-HDR IPS panel. Apple does not provide a contrast-ratio rating for the Studio Display, but in our testing, it proved typical of a standard IPS panel. (More on that later.) Its refresh rate is 60Hz, and it lacks support for any flavor of adaptive sync.

(Credit: Joseph Maldonado)
Included in the Studio Display’s base price is your choice of a stand with tilt adjustment or a VESA-mount adapter for arm- or wall-mounting. Our review unit is equipped with Apple’s upgraded stand, which offers both height and tilt adjustment. It costs an extra $400, which accounts for the $1,999 price of our test model. The upgraded stand is deeper front to back, making the Studio Display 8.1 inches deep.

Included in the Studio Display’s base price are either the tilt-adjustable stand or VESA mounting hardware. The height- and tilt-adjustable stand is a $400 extra. (Credit: Apple)
That enhanced stand comes standard on the Studio Display XDR (unless you opt for VESA-mount hardware instead), which we tested concurrently with the Studio Display. Physically, I could not tell the Studio Display apart from the XDR version—it was only by connecting it to a MacBook and going into the Displays menu that I could identify it.

(Credit: Joseph Maldonado)
At a glance, the 2026 Studio Display looks virtually identical to the original Studio Display, with one obvious difference in the ports, which I will discuss later.

(Credit: Joseph Maldonado)
For those who work in well-lit offices or near a window all day, Apple is asking another $300 for what it calls “nano-texture glass,” a special screen surfacing that creates a matte, anti-glare finish. The model I reviewed here has the standard glass, but the Studio Display XDR that we tested concurrently has the nano-texture glass (also optional on that model), which indeed proved effective in reducing glare and reflections in situations with substantial ambient light.

(Credit: Joseph Maldonado)
