Verdict

The iPad Pro M5 feels like one of Apple’s most luxurious products. It’s beautifully crafted, with a seriously thin and light design that just wants to be held and interacted with. All the tablet boxes are ticked: stunning screen, plenty of power, portable build. iPadOS remains somewhat limited, and of course, all these high-end features make for a very expensive slate – but I can’t help but want to use it constantly.

  • Upgraded base RAM

  • Wi-Fi 7 support

  • The best screen on any tablet

  • iPadOS is getting better and better

  • Give us some fun colours

  • A fairly minor update

Key Features

  • Trusted Reviews Icon

    Review Price:
    £999

  • High-end chip

    The first iPad running the M5 chip, with either 12 or 16GB RAM

  • Two sizes

    Pick between 11 and 13-inch display sizes

  • Fantastic Screen

    The best screen on an iPad, thanks to the OLED panel

Introduction

Apple’s iPad range has never been better balanced. The base model is great for students, the iPad Air M4 is an easy recommendation for just about anyone, and the iPad Pro is for those who require the very best.

The iPad Pro M5 – available in both 11-inch and 13-inch sizes – sits very much at the top of Apple’s tablet range. Starting at £999/$999 and topping out at £2399/$2399, this is a pricey piece of kit.

I have been testing the iPad Pro M5 out to find out whether this is the best iPad (or even the best tablet) and whether it really does justify that high price.

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Design

  • Thin and light
  • Two colours
  • Fantastic build

Apple doesn’t drastically change designs between generations anymore, and since we got a slimmed-down iPad with a fresh look for the M4 refresh, it was always going to be the case that we’d get the same look again here.

Sticking with the same look is no bad thing. This isn’t just the best-looking iPad, but the best-looking tablet you can buy. I don’t think anything even comes close. It’s ridiculously thin (5.3mm for the 11-inch, 5.1mm for the 13-inch) and slips easily into a bag. It’s perfectly weighted and feels great to hold even for longer periods. Even though the mid-range iPad is called ‘Air’, the Pro is much thinner and lighter.

iPad Pro M5 on desk with pen
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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There’s not much by way of design flourishes here, and this iPad is all about showcasing the gorgeous screen on the front.

There are a couple of buttons dotted around the sides, including power and volume up/down, and on the back, you’ve got an Apple logo in the middle and the Smart Connector towards the bottom for connecting keyboard accessories. One side is magnetic to attach the Apple Pencil Pro, and there’s a USB-C/Thunderbolt port on the bottom for charging and data transfer.

The front-facing FaceTime camera continues to sit on the long side of the tablet, making it much better to use when the tablet is docked in a keyboard case.

iPad Pro M5 on desk back
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Even though Apple has started to add some fun colours to the iPhone Pro line, including the standout Cosmic Orange, the two hues the iPad Pro comes in are distinctly unimaginative. It would be nice to freshen up the options a little, as the grey and darker greys do little to stand out.

While it’s the 11-inch model I have in for review, I used the 13-inch M4 edition extensively, and all the dimensions are the same here. Considering how big the screen is, it remains a very portable tablet.

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Screen

  • The OLED remains exceptional
  • Choice between 11 and 13-inch sizes
  • Still my favourite tablet display

I loved the screen on the previous-generation iPad Pro, and as this one is the same, I love this screen too. Even a year on, the tandem OLED Ultra Retina XDR display remains unmatched, even up against displays on the best tablets

The specs for this display include brightness levels up to 1600 nits for certain content, excellent HDR support, a 200,000:1 contrast ratio and a 264ppi for the 11-inch version. Both sizes have the same basic specs too, something that wasn’t always the case with the Pro iPads.

Specs are one thing, and the panel here certainly ticks all the boxes on paper. But in actual use, it’s even better than it sounds. Colours are wonderfully rich and immersive, without being overbearing or unrealistic. Contrast is wonderful too, a big benefit of this dual OLED panel. It’s also available with the nano-textured glass option that Apple has used on numerous laptops and Macs recently. This adds some extra texture to the panel to better handle reflections.

I’ve spent countless hours during the review period watching everything from HDR-toting Dolby Vision content from iTunes and Netflix, to scrolling through my iCloud photo library and I’m continually impressed. It’s calibrated to perfection, and even does a good job at ensuring it’s visible in sunnier environments.

iPad Pro M5 on desk with pen and watching video
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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This is the best screen on iPad, and really the single reason I would recommend certain people plumping for the Pro rather than the Air.

With the two 11-inch iPads next to each other, playing Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, the differences in quality are obvious. The OLED displays perfect blacks, so the bars at the top and bottom of the video blend seamlessly into the bezel, rather than looking like a dark shade of grey. The colours on the Pro are far punchier too, and the higher levels of brightness allow for much HDR playback. The whole experience is made even better by the fantastic stereo speakers, which are some of the best on any tablet I have reviewed.

It’s the smoothest iPad screen too, as it remains the only option with the same adaptive 120Hz ProMotion tech as the recent iPhones. 

Performance and Software

  • The addition of the M5 is the only upgrade here
  • Wi-Fi 7 is added with the N1 
  • 12 or 16GB RAM, up from a base of 8GB

It’s inside the tablet where the upgrades are felt this time around. The switch to the M5 chip, and the N1 networking chip, are really all that’s new here. That N1 chip supports Wi-Fi 7, a welcome upgrade that’ll deliver noticeable speed boosts for anyone with a capable router.

The actual M5 chip that comes inside depends on the storage model. The 256GB and 512GB models have an M5 with a 9-core CPU (that includes three performance cores and six efficiency cores) and a 10-core GPU. This is then painted with 12GB RAM. Apple has upgraded the base RAM from 8- to 12GB with the M5 version, and that’s always a welcome bump.

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The higher-spec 1 or 2TB models have an extra performance core in the CPU, taking it to 10 and 16GB RAM. All models have 153 GB/s of memory bandwidth, 16-core neural engines, and hardware-accelerated ray tracing.

Test Data

  Apple iPad Pro M5 Apple iPad Air M4 Apple iPad Pro M4 2024
Geekbench 6 single core 4081 3726 3660
Geekbench 6 multi core 16441 13286 14555
Geekbench 6 GPU 74536 52607

A lot of the improvements this time around are for those with AI-focused workloads. Apple’s Creator Studio, a new subscription service bundling in a selection of Pro apps, is a showcase of the tablet’s power. In Pixelmator Pro, for example, the AI editing skills and image resolution bumps are performed more quickly than on the M4-equipped tablets.

iPad Pro M5 on desk with pen and split screen
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The same goes for exporting 4K footage from Final Cut Pro. It’s not a day-and-night difference, but it does shave a few seconds off, which adds up over time.

I’ve been using the iPad Pro M5 for a few months now, and I can’t think of a single instance where it has slowed down. It can handle everything, and there’s so much more headroom for it to do more things in the future.

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Apple has drastically improved iPadOS recently, with better multitasking support, a better file system and the aforementioned Pro-centric apps available in Creator Studio. For those who still want an iPad to run macOS, it doesn’t – but I can get serious work done on this machine now, and that’s great.

Alongside the iPad Pro M5, Apple sells two headline accessories. Both of which I would recommend for getting the most out of the tablet. The Magic Keyboard (from £299/$299) offers a fantastic typing experience, with keys that mirror the best MacBooks, a large, responsive trackpad, and protection for the iPad when it’s in a bag. 

Then there’s the Apple Pencil Pro ($129/£129), a stylus that needs little introduction. It’s a great, responsive tool for notes and drawing.

iPad Pro M5 on desk camera
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

There’s a single camera on the back as the ultra-wide was ditched with the M4 redesign, leaving just a 12MP main camera. It is excellent for taking pictures of documents and for utilising AR content. It shoots 4K video too, even in the ProRes format.

Battery Life

  • Quicker to charge with a 60W plug
  • No upgrade in endurance
  • USB-C charging

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When Apple redesigned the iPad Pro, there were two routes it could have taken. Use the extra space for a bigger battery, or ensure the device is as thin as possible. While I probably would have plumped for option one, there’s no doubting that launching such a slim and light tablet made waves.

So, while there’s no huge advances in battery life here compared to previous models, there’s also been no dramatic sacrifices.

I can easily get the iPad Pro M5 11-inch to last me a full workday when I am using it as a laptop replacement, and all my testing points to the battery life being virtually the same as the M4 model.

On a 12-hour flight from London to Las Vegas, I watched films the entire way and had 15% left over at the end. That’s impressive going.

As has been the case with all M-series iPads I have tested, the battery life can drain quickly during intensive tasks. Zoom calls are a real drain – an hour call can eat through as much as 15%. It’s a similar situation with lots of importing and exporting of photos and videos into Lightroom and Final Cut. If you’re using the iPad for heavier tasks, keep a plug handy.

Buy the tablet in the UK, and there will be no charger in the box, just a USB-C to USB-C cable. This is now normal for all Apple tablets. In the US, you do get a charger in the box, but it remains a slow 20W plug that offers pretty slow speeds. Instead, you should go for a 60W plug, which can charge up to 50% in roughly 30 minutes and should come as standard on such an expensive device.

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Should you buy it?

The screen is the deciding factor

The iPad Pro sets itself apart from the Air by having a superior display. The OLED panel, the 120Hz refresh rate, the far higher peak brightness are all winners in my book.

You just want an iPad to sit alongside your laptop

Apple has made the iPad Air M4 so good, that it should be most people’s first port of call when it comes to picking an iPad.

Final Thoughts

The iPad Pro M5 is a great tablet. It’s luxurious, beautifully made, fantastically capable and has the best screen you’ll find. It’s not going to appeal to anyone who upgraded to the redesigned M4 version, but if you’re someone who lives on an iPad and wants the very best, and are holding on to an older model, this is an excellent upgrade.

You do really need to know you’re going to get the best out of it, though. Not only is this an expensive tablet, but Apple’s cheaper slates are so good that for many, there will be no need to pay upwards of £1000/$1000. The iPad Air, in its M4 variant, is just as capable for even heavy tasks and matches many of the specs of the Pro at a much lower price.

How We Test

Unlike other sites, we thoroughly test every product we review. We use industry-standard tests in order to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever accept money to review a product.

Test Data

  Apple iPad Pro M5
Geekbench 6 single core 4081
Geekbench 6 multi core 16441
Geekbench 6 GPU 74536
1 hour video playback (Netflix, HDR) 3 %
GFXBench – Aztec Ruins 60 fps
GFXBench – Car Chase 60 fps

Full Specs

  Apple iPad Pro M5 Review
UK RRP £999
USA RRP $995
Manufacturer Apple
Screen Size 11 inches
Storage Capacity 256GB, 512GB, 1TB, 2TB
Rear Camera 12MP
Front Camera 12MP
Video Recording Yes
IP rating No
Battery 31.29 Whr
Fast Charging Yes
Size (Dimensions) x x INCHES
Weight 446 G
Operating System iPadOS
Release Date 2025
First Reviewed Date 16/06/2026
Resolution 2420 x 1668
HDR Yes
Refresh Rate 120 Hz
Ports Thunderbolt / USB 4 port
Chipset Apple M5
RAM 12GB, 16GB
Colours Grey, Silver

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ZDNET key takeaways

  • There are three DNS records that protect your domain and keep your emails out of junk.
  • Running all three gives you complete coverage. 
  • They also protect your domain from being hijacked.

If you send a lot of work emails and keep getting radio silence, your emails are very likely ending up in someone’s spam folder. 

There are a few reasons this could happen that don’t always have to do with the contents of your emails. Most commonly, your domain may not be authenticated, which gives receiving mail servers all the reason they need to quietly file your messages away in the spam folder. 

Also: How a burner email can protect your inbox – setting one up one is easy and free

I’ve seen this catch people off guard more often than you’d expect, including teams with genuinely good email content. Thankfully, there’s an easy fix involving three DNS records called SPF, DKIM, and DMARC. Together, they prove to the internet that your emails are legitimate. They also protect your domain from being hijacked by cybercriminals so they can impersonate you in emails.

Gmail and Yahoo began enforcing these authentication requirements for bulk senders in Feb. 2024. Following this, Microsoft added the same requirements for Outlook.com, Hotmail, and Live.com in May 2025. If you haven’t set these up yet, they are no longer optional.

What SPF, DKIM, and DMARC actually do

Each of the three protocols addresses a different weak point in email authentication. SPF verifies that the server sending your email is authorized to do so. DKIM adds a cryptographic signature to your outgoing messages, confirming they haven’t been altered in transit. 

DMARC ties the two together by publishing a policy that tells receiving servers what to do when either check fails, and routes authentication reports back to you.

You genuinely need all three. SPF alone can’t stop someone from forging the “From” address your recipient sees in their inbox. DKIM alone won’t catch an email sent from an unauthorized server. Only when you run all three do you get complete coverage against both deliverability problems and domain spoofing.

1. SPF: Authorize the servers that send on your behalf

screenshot-tool-20260521185856.png

Screenshot by Ritoban Mukherjee/ZDNET

SPF (Sender Policy Framework) is a DNS TXT record that lists every IP address and mail server authorized to send email on behalf of your domain. When a recipient’s mail server receives a message claiming to be from you, it checks that record against the sending server’s IP. If the IP isn’t on the list, the message fails.

Also: Here’s my favorite email trick for cleaning up inbox clutter – automatically

Setting it up means logging in to your domain registrar (GoDaddy, Cloudflare, Namecheap, etc.) and adding a TXT record at the root of your domain. Here’s how that works: 

  1. First get your SPF value from your email service. Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, and most platforms provide the exact record value you need to copy-paste on their domain authentication page. For Google Workspace, it goes like this: v=spf1 include:_spf.google.com ~all. 

  2. If you send emails through multiple services, you should stack them in the same record, e.g.  v=spf1 include:_spf.google.com include:spf.protection.outlook.com ~all. 

  3. Log into the platform where you manage your domain’s DNS records. This could be GoDaddy, Cloudflare, Namecheap, Route 53, etc. Create a new TXT record on your DNS page, set the host to @ (your root domain), and paste the SPF value from the earlier step.

It’s as easy as that! Note that your domain can have only one SPF TXT record, with no more than 10 DNS lookups. Creating a second SPF record instead of editing the first will break both. So keep your authorized senders list lean. 

2. DKIM: Add a tamper-proof signature to every email

screenshot-tool-20260521185419.png

Screenshot by Ritoban Mukherjee/ZDNET

DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail) uses public-key cryptography to sign your outgoing messages. Your mail server attaches a signature using a private key it holds, so recipients can verify it against a matching public key you’ve published in your DNS. If the email was modified at any point between your server and the recipient’s inbox, that signature check fails.

Also: This simple email trick saves me from annoying marketing spam (and it’s free to do)

Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, and most major email platforms like SendGrid will generate a DKIM key pair for you. Your job is to copy the public key they provide and paste it into your domain’s DNS settings as a new TXT record. 

While the exact setup steps depend on your email provider and domain registrar, here’s a general overview of what you need to do. 

  1. Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, SendGrid, Mailchimp, and other email service providers will generate a DKIM record for you if you navigate to their domain authentication settings page. For example, if you use Google Workspace, this is located within Apps > Google Workspace > Gmail in Google Admin Console. Click to generate a new record and copy these values first. 

  2. Next, navigate to your domain registrar’s DNS settings page and create a new TXT record like you did when setting up SPIF earlier. Note that some providers may also require you to add this as a CNAME record instead of a TXT record, so refer to your email provider’s documentation. 

  3. Paste in the host name and record value you got from your email provider into the new DNS record. Make sure there are no typos because this can affect domain security.

  4. Now, return to your email provider’s authentication settings. This is where you enable DKIM signing for your domain. In Google Workspace, this is done by revisiting the “Authenticate email” page in the Admin Console and clicking “Start authentication.” Remember that you should do this after 24-48 hours since DNS records take a while to propagate across your domain. 

DKIM is especially useful for forwarded messages. Forwarding often breaks SPF because the IP address changes, but the DKIM signature typically survives intact. That means a forwarded email can still pass authentication when SPF alone would have failed. 

3. DMARC: Set the rules for what happens when authentication fails

screenshot-tool-20260521190257.png

Screenshot by Ritoban Mukherjee/ZDNET

DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting, and Conformance) is the policy layer that makes SPF and DKIM enforceable. Without it, a receiving server that detects a failed check has no instructions on what to do next, and you have no visibility into what’s failing or why. Here’s how to get it up and running:

  1. Start by creating a dedicated inbox for DMARC reports first, like reports@yourdomain.com. 

  2. Most email providers offer a DMARC generator in their dashboard, but you can also use a third-party service like MXToolbox or DMARCLY. 

  3. Add a new TXT record. The host name should read _dmarc. Paste in the record value directly from your DMARC generator. 

  4. Keep an eye out for any failure reports in your dedicated inbox for 2-4 weeks. This will reveal any issues with the mailbox that need to be addressed for better deliverability.

Also: I tested NordVPN’s free scam checker with real phishing emails – here’s how it fared

Like the other two, DMARC is a TXT record, added this time to _dmarc.yourdomain.com. A simple starting record looks like this: v=DMARC1; p=none; rua=mailto:reports@yourdomain.com. The p=none setting means receiving servers won’t take any action on failing messages, but will send you aggregate reports at the address you specify. Those reports show which services are sending on your behalf and whether they’re passing authentication.

Once you’ve reviewed a few weeks of reports and confirmed your legitimate mail is passing cleanly, you can tighten the policy. Move to p=quarantine to route failing messages to spam, then eventually to p=reject to block them entirely. 

Jumping straight to p=reject before reviewing your reports is probably the most common implementation mistake I see, and it ends up blocking your own marketing or transactional emails.

Why you can’t just pick one

Each protocol has a gap that the others fill. SPF checks the sending server but not the “From” address that recipients actually see, so an attacker can pass SPF while still impersonating your domain. DKIM verifies message integrity but doesn’t check whether the signing domain matches the visible sender. 

DMARC enforces alignment among all these elements and applies your chosen policy when something is out of alignment.

The combined deliverability upside is measurable. According to Validity’s 2025 Email Benchmark Report, properly authenticated domains see inbox placement rates roughly 60 percentage points higher than unauthenticated ones. For anyone running cold outreach campaigns or bulk newsletters, that gap is the difference between a campaign that produces results and one that disappears entirely.

How to verify your records are working

DNS changes typically take anywhere from 15 minutes to 48 hours to propagate worldwide. Once that window passes, free tools can tell you immediately whether everything is configured correctly. MX Toolbox has separate checkers for SPF, DKIM, and DMARC. You can also send a test email to check@dmarcly.com, which replies with a full authentication report for your domain.

Also: Best email hosting services 2026: Expert tested and reviewed

Your DMARC aggregate reports are the most valuable ongoing signal. Within a day or two of publishing your DMARC record, reports will start arriving at the address you specified. They show every server sending email under your domain and whether each one is passing or failing authentication. Reading them regularly is the best way to catch misconfigurations early, before they affect your deliverability or allow your domain to be abused in phishing campaigns.





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