Skip to main content

Apple’s new 6K display costs $5,000 and can maintain 1,000 nits of brightness

Image used with permission by copyright holder
Promotional logo for WWDC 2023.
This story is part of our complete Apple WWDC coverage
Updated less than 3 days ago

To complement the announcement of Apple’s completely redesigned Mac Pro for 2019, CEO Tim Cook and his team also introduced a new display for its pro users. With features like high-resolution support, increased contrast ratios, precision-calibrated HDR, and a bright panel, Apple is calling its new 32-inch Retina Display with 6K resolution the Pro Display XDR, which starts at $4,999. Apple claims that the display is 40% larger than the iMac 5K’s screen, giving developers more room to work on their content.

XDR stands for extreme dynamic range, Cook’s team said during Apple’s WWDC keynote. “Now for great HDR images, you need extreme brightness, right next to extreme contrast for deep blacks, and this is incredibly hard to achieve,” Apple said. “So we have designed a backlight system like none other in the world.”

Recommended Videos

Apple did this by using an array of blue LEDs to turn up the brightness, and to manage heat, the Pro Display XDR uses the same lattice pattern found on the new Mac Pro to help keep it cool, allowing the panel to maintain a brightness of 1,000 nits indefinitely, or reach peak brightness of 1,600 nits. “And this is going to allow our pros to do things they have been dreaming about,” Apple continued, noting that the panel supports 1,000,000:1 contrast ratios.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The panel also comes with P3 and true 10-bit color support with reference modes that are calibrated at the factory. And with a wide viewing angle, Apple claimed that off-axis contrast is 25 times better than a typical LCD panel. “And now all pros can use the same display across the workflow, and have the same incredible XDR viewing experience with all the features they need to create their life’s best work, making this the world’s best pro display,” Apple said.

Additionally, Apple also introduced a new color glass to help reduce glare. Rather than applying a matte finish to the glass, which can create a haze on the panel, Apple is using a new nanotech manufacturing process to precisely etch the glass. This version adds a $1,000 premium to the price.

In addition to the display, Apple also has a metal stand to match the look of the Pro Display XDR. The stand comes with a unique counterbalancing arm that makes it easy to raise and lower the display, and angle and tilt it, similar to what Microsoft did with the Surface Studio 2. It even rotate completely in what Apple calls “Portrait Mode.”

“It provides tilt and height adjustment, and it maintains the displays angle as it’s raised or lowered,” Apple said in the keynote. The display can also quickly detach from the stand, allowing pro users to quickly pack it up and take it on location.

From the keynote, it doesn’t appear that the stand will be included in the display’s $5,000 starting price. Apple is selling this accessory as a $999 option.

The stand will also allow the display to be rotated for portrait mode photo editing and also coding, though using a pro monitor to just write code may be excessive. A VESA mounting tool will add $199 to the cost of the panel, which will arrive this fall. To justify the high price tag, Apple is comparing its Pro Display XDR against reference monitors, some of which can cost as much as $43,000.

And with Thunderbolt 3 support, you can daisy chain the displays together in a simple setup. Apple claims that you can connect two Pro Display XDR panels together with a MacBook Pro, or up to six displays together with the new Mac Pro for a total of 120 million pixels.

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
4 big problems with Apple’s brand-new Studio Display
The Apple Studio Display alongside a Mac Studio computer on a desk.

At its Peek Performance event, Apple just introduced the Studio Display monitor, an alternative to the company’s high-end Pro Display XDR monitor with a much lower price. Yet we’ve noticed four key problems with the Studio Display that make us a little apprehensive. Let’s see where Apple seems to have slipped up.
No HDR support

Apple positioned the Studio Display as a pro-level monitor, complete with a 5K resolution, “sensational” camera and audio setup, and the same nano-texture coating as the Pro Display XDR. Yet it lacks a key feature from its larger, more expensive sibling: Proper HDR support.

Read more
Apple’s new $1,599 Studio Display is aimed at creative pros
A person works at a station equipped with the all new Mac Studio and Studio Display.

Apple announced the new 27-inch Studio Display at its Peek Performance event on Tuesday. The monitor is a successor to 2019's Pro Display XDR, and it's the second external display Apple has released.

It's a 5K Retina display, and the screen size shakes out to a pixel density of 218 pixels per inch. It's available to purchase today for $1,599, and Apple says it will be available to everyone on March 18. Users can choose between a swivel mount that offers up to 30 degrees of swivel or a height-and-swivel mount similar to the Pro Display XDR's. The height-adjustable mount costs an extra $400.

Read more
The reason to buy a new iPad Pro is the display, not the M1 chip
The iPad Pro 2021 on a table, showing the screen.

The 2021 iPad Pro brings with it a series of updates, including features like Center Stage and 5G support. But perhaps the most talked-about changes to the iPad Pro are that it comes with a new M1 chip and boasts Apple's Liquid Retina XDR display tech.

The M1 chip has made tons of headlines, and for good reason. It's an incredibly high-performing chip, and absolutely raises the bar for the iPad. But the iPad Pro already performed like a beast, and frankly, I don't notice a difference in performance between my last-gen iPad Pro and the new one.

Read more