
Apple’s new MacBook Neo is proving to be a bit of a standout—not just for its Rs 69,900 price, but for how surprisingly easy it is to take apart and fix. A teardown by Australian repair channel Tech Re-Nu shows it might be the most straightforward Mac laptop to work on in recent years.
It took about six minutes to open up the Neo, using nothing but standard Torx screws and some cable management. The teardown starts with loosening eight screws on the bottom of the aluminum body, much like on the MacBook Air or Pro. Inside, you find a tiny motherboard taking up just a small spot in the middle, with a really clean, open layout and no unnecessary bits like hinge covers getting in the way.
The battery stands out. It’s held down by 18 screws and pulls right out. There aren’t any pull-tabs or stubborn glue underneath. In fact, there was no tape at all in the process, which is pretty much unheard of for a newer Mac. Ports are modular: both USB-Cs, the speakers (four screws each, no adhesive), and the headphone jack can all come out on their own, without having to replace bigger chunks of the machine. The only glue spotted was a tiny bit on the trackpad where its cable connects to the board.
Tech Re-Nu didn’t strip it down completely, but Apple’s own docs confirm you can swap the keyboard separately, without touching the entire top case. That’s a game-changer compared to Airs and Pros, where a bad keyboard often means a full top-case replacement, battery, speakers, and all included. It still takes over 40 screws to get to the Neo’s keyboard, but it’s a lot more targeted (and likely cheaper) than before.
All this makes the Neo one of the more repairable laptops in Apple’s current lineup. For students or first-time buyers eyeing that low price, it means you could keep the device going longer with simple fixes for worn ports, worn-out speakers, or a sticky keyboard, instead of shelling out for major overhaul. It also nods to the growing push for right-to-repair, helping cut down on e-waste.








