List of Apple processors

Apple Inc. designs its own (SoC) and  (SiP) processors for its consumer devices. Marketed as "Apple Silicon", development is headed by Senior VP of Hardware Technologies Johny Srouji at Apple's chip facilities in Cupertino, California and, Israel.

History
In April 2008, Apple acquired P.A. Semi for $278 million to bring in-house to the company. At the time, Apple relied on Intel for central processing units in its desktop products and Samsung for its mobile products.

Early processors
Apple first used SoC designs in early revisions of the iPhone and iPod touch. Specified by Apple and manufactured by Samsung, they combine into one package: a single ARM-based processing core (CPU), a graphics processing unit (GPU), and other electronics necessary for mobile computing.


 * The APL0098 (also 8900B or S5L8900) is a (PoP) system on a chip (SoC) that was introduced on June 29, 2007, at the launch of the original iPhone. It includes a 412 MHz single-core  CPU and a  MBX Lite GPU. It was manufactured by Samsung on a 90 nm . The iPhone 3G and the 1st-generation iPod touch also used it.
 * The APL0278 (also S5L8720) is a PoP SoC introduced on September 9, 2008, at the launch of the 2nd-generation iPod touch. It includes a 533 MHz single-core ARM11 CPU and a PowerVR MBX Lite GPU. It was manufactured by Samsung on a 65 nm process.
 * The APL0298 (also S5L8920) is a PoP SoC introduced on June 8, 2009, at the launch of the iPhone 3GS. It includes a 600 MHz single-core CPU and a PowerVR SGX535 GPU. It was manufactured by Samsung on a 65 nm process.
 * The APL2298 (also S5L8922) is a 45 nm version of the iPhone 3GS SoC and was introduced on September 9, 2009, at the launch of the 3rd-generation iPod touch.

A series
The Apple A series is a family of designs developed by Apple for use in their mobile and consumer devices. They integrate one or more ARM-based processing cores (CPU), a graphics processing unit (GPU), and other electronics necessary to provide mobile computing functions within a single physical package. These were originally manufactured for Apple by Samsung, but production has since shifted to TSMC.
 * Apple A4 — (2010) introduced in the original iPad and also used in the iPhone 4, iPod touch (4th generation), and Apple TV (2nd generation).
 * Apple A5 — (2011) introduced in the iPad 2 and used in the iPhone 4S, iPod touch (5th generation) and 1st generation iPad mini.
 * Apple A5X — (2012) introduced in the iPad (3rd generation).
 * Apple A6 — (2012) introduced in the iPhone 5 and later used in the iPhone 5C; contained a custom CPU designed internally at Apple (called "Swift") instead of one licensed from ARM.
 * Apple A6X — (2012) introduced in the iPad (4th generation).
 * Apple A7 — (2013) introduced in the iPhone 5S, the company's first 64-bit mobile processor. Also used in the 2nd and 3rd generation iPad minis and 1st generation iPad Air.
 * Apple A8 — (2014) introduced in the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus; also used by the iPad mini 4, 6th generation iPod touch, and the 1st-generation HomePod.
 * Apple A8X — (2014) introduced in the iPad Air 2.
 * Apple A9 — (2015) introduced in the iPhone 6S and 6S Plus, and later used in the 1st-generation iPhone SE and the 5th-generation iPad.
 * Apple A9X — (2015) introduced in the 1st-generation iPad Pro, the company's first "desktop class" processor for mobile devices.
 * Apple A10 Fusion — (2016) introduced in the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus, and later used in the 6th and 7th-generation iPad. This was the first processor produced for Apple solely by TSMC.
 * Apple A10X Fusion — (2017) introduced in the 2nd-generation iPad Pro, and also used in the 1st-generation Apple TV 4K.
 * Apple A11 Bionic — (2017) introduced in the iPhone 8, 8 Plus, and iPhone X. First implementation of Neural Engine machine learning.
 * Apple A12 Bionic — (2018) introduced in the iPhone XR, XS, and XS Max, and also used in the 3rd-generation iPad Air, 5th-generation iPad mini and the 2nd-generation Apple TV 4K, and later used in the 8th-generation iPad.
 * Apple A12X Bionic — (2018) introduced in the 3rd-generation iPad Pro.
 * Apple A12Z Bionic — (2020) introduced in the 4th-generation iPad Pro, and used in the 2020 Mac mini-based Developer Transition Kit.
 * Apple A13 Bionic — (2019) introduced in the iPhone 11, 11 Pro, 11 Pro Max; also used in the 2nd-generation iPhone SE, 9th-generation iPad, and Studio Display.
 * Apple A14 Bionic — (2020) introduced in the 4th-generation iPad Air; also used in the iPhone 12 series and the 10th-generation iPad.
 * Apple A15 Bionic — (2021) introduced in the iPhone 13 series and the 6th-generation iPad mini; also adopted by the 3rd-generation iPhone SE in March 2022.
 * Apple A16 Bionic — (2022) introduced in the iPhone 14 Pro and 14 Pro Max.

M series
Introduced by Apple in late 2020 to transition its Mac computers away from Intel processors. By the end of following year, only three Intel-based Macs remained: the 27-inch iMac, the Mac mini (still offered as an alternative to the M1 version), and the 3rd-generation Mac Pro.




 * Apple M1 — introduced in November 2020 with support for up to 16 GB RAM for the first Apple Silicon-based Macs, the MacBook Air, 13-inch MacBook Pro, and Mac mini; also adopted by the 24-inch iMac and 5th-generation iPad Pro in April 2021; as well as the 5th-generation iPad Air in March 2022.
 * Apple M1 Pro — introduced in October 2021 with support for up to 32 GB RAM for the 14 and 16-inch MacBook Pros.
 * Apple M1 Max — introduced in October 2021 with support for up to 64 GB RAM in the 14 and 16-inch MacBook Pros; also adopted by the base model Mac Studio in March 2022.
 * Apple M1 Ultra — introduced in March 2022 with support for up to 128 GB RAM in the Mac Studio.
 * Apple M2 — introduced in June 2022 to support the new MacBook Air and the 13-inch MacBook Pro; also adopted by the updated base model Mac mini in January 2023.
 * Apple M2 Pro — introduced in January 2023 with support for the updated Mac mini, and 14 and 16-inch MacBook Pros.
 * Apple M2 Max — introduced in January 2023 with support for up to 96 GB RAM in the updated 14 and 16-inch MacBook Pros.

M series (motion coprocessors)

 * Apple M7 — introduced with the Apple A7 in the iPhone 5S in September 2013.
 * Apple M8 — introduced with the Apple A8 in the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus in September 2014.
 * Later versions (Apple M9, M10, M11) were integrated on the die of subsequent Apple processors, starting with the Apple A9. For more information, see Apple motion coprocessors.

S series

 * Apple S1 — introduced in the original Apple Watch.
 * Apple S1P — introduced in the Apple Watch Series 1.
 * Apple S2 — introduced in the Apple Watch Series 2.
 * Apple S3 — introduced in the Apple Watch Series 3.
 * Apple S4 — introduced in the Apple Watch Series 4.
 * Apple S5 — introduced in the Apple Watch Series 5; also used in the 1st-generation Apple Watch SE and HomePod mini.
 * Apple S6 — introduced in the Apple Watch Series 6.
 * Apple S7 — introduced in the Apple Watch Series 7; also used in the 2nd-generation HomePod.
 * Apple S8 — introduced in the Apple Watch Series 8; also used in the 2nd-generation Apple Watch SE and Apple Watch Ultra.

T series

 * Apple T1 — manages the system management controller (SMC) in the 2016 and 2017 MacBook Pros
 * Apple T2 — introduced in the iMac Pro and future Intel Macs. Based on the Apple A10.

W series

 * Apple W1 — manages Bluetooth and battery usage in the 1st-generation AirPods.
 * Apple W2 — integrated into the Apple S3 used in the Apple Watch Series 3.
 * Apple W3 — integrated into the Apple S4, S5, and S6 used in the Apple Watch Series 4, 5, 6, and SE.

H series

 * Apple H1 — introduced in the 2nd-generation AirPods for increased efficiency over the W1.
 * Apple H2 — introduced in the 2nd-generation AirPods Pro.

U series

 * Apple U1 — uses technology to control spatial awareness in the iPhone 11 series, iPhone 12 series, iPhone 13 series, HomePod mini, Apple Watch Series 6, and AirTags.

Articles

 * Apple Silicon: The Complete Guide by Juli Clover at MacRumors (2021-11-08)
 * Ten years of Apple technology shifts made the ARM Mac possible by Mike Peterson at AppleInsider (2020-06-12)
 * How Apple Built a Chip Powerhouse to Threaten Qualcomm and Intel by Mark Gurman at Bloomberg Technology (2018-01-29, archived 2018-01-29)