If you're considering a new Mac and need an external monitor, there are more good options right now than at any point in the last several years. The 27-inch 5K category — the sweet spot for MacBook Pro and Mac mini users — has gone from a couple of choices to nearly a dozen. I've been researching the current field for clients, and here's what I've found worth considering.
When Apple built the Retina iMac, it used a 27-inch screen at 5120×2880 — a resolution that gives you 218 pixels per inch. That's the magic number. At that density, text is razor-sharp, photos look lifelike, and you can't see individual pixels at normal viewing distance. macOS is optimized to scale at exactly this resolution on a 27-inch panel.
A 4K monitor at 27 inches gives you about 163 PPI — noticeably softer. You can use one, and many people do, but if you've ever worked on a Retina Mac, the difference is hard to unsee. That's why the 5K category exists: it's the Mac-native resolution.
I verified these prices against current retail listings in March 2026. All monitors are 27-inch, 5K (5120×2880), IPS panels.
| Monitor | Connection & Power | Color Accuracy | Refresh Rate | Price | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ASUS ProArt PA27JCV | USB-C, 96W charging | 99% DCI-P3, Calman Verified | 60 Hz | $729–$800 | Budget pick — single-monitor Mac setup |
| ViewSonic VP2788-5K | Thunderbolt 4, 100W charging | 99% DCI-P3, Pantone Validated | 75 Hz | $850–$950 | Best all-round Mac pick |
| ASUS ROG Strix XG27JCG | USB-C, 15W only | 97% DCI-P3 | 180 Hz | $849 | Gaming + Mac hybrid (won't charge a laptop) |
| BenQ MA270S | Thunderbolt 4, 96W charging | 99% P3, Nano Gloss | 60 Hz | $999 | Glossy “Studio Display look” for Mac users |
| BenQ PD2730S | Thunderbolt 4, 90W charging | 98% P3, Nano Matte | 60 Hz | $1,199 | Designers who want Mac-tuned workflow tools |
| Apple Studio Display (2026) | Thunderbolt 5, charges MacBook | P3 wide color, True Tone, 600 nit | 60 Hz | $1,599 | Apple camera, speakers, and ecosystem integration |
The dream setup for a MacBook user is plugging in a single cable that drives the display and charges your laptop. Not all of these monitors deliver that. (If you use a Mac mini or Mac Studio, charging isn't a factor — any of these monitors will work with a single cable for video and data. The power delivery differences only matter for laptops.)
Thunderbolt 4 monitors (ViewSonic VP2788-5K, BenQ MA270S, BenQ PD2730S) give you a true one-cable experience for laptops. You plug in one Thunderbolt cable. It carries video, data, and enough power to charge a MacBook Pro. These monitors also let you daisy-chain a second display off the back — useful if you want a dual-monitor setup from a single port on your Mac.
USB-C monitors (ASUS ProArt PA27JCV) carry video and charge your laptop at 96W — plenty for any MacBook Air or most MacBook Pro models. But you can't daisy-chain, and data transfer speeds are lower.
Low-power USB-C (ASUS ROG Strix XG27JCG) provides only 15W through USB-C. That's enough to slowly charge a phone, not a laptop. You'll need to plug your MacBook into its own charger separately. This isn't a dealbreaker — especially for desktop Mac users — but it does mean two cables on your desk if you're running a laptop.
The ASUS ProArt PA27JCV at $729 is the story of this category. It has the same 5K resolution, the same 99% DCI-P3 color coverage, and better factory calibration than monitors costing twice as much. PCWorld called it an easy recommendation for anyone who wants a 5K monitor.
The catch? No Thunderbolt. You get USB-C with 96W power delivery — which is fine for charging and video — but you can't daisy-chain a second display. If you only need one monitor, this is the best value in the category by a wide margin.
Apple refreshed the Studio Display on March 3, 2026. Here's what changed: a better webcam and Thunderbolt 5 instead of Thunderbolt 3. Here's what didn't change: the panel (still 60Hz, still 5K, still 600 nits), the design, and the price ($1,599).
Apple also introduced the Studio Display XDR — an entirely new model starting at $3,299. It uses a mini-LED backlight with over 2,000 local dimming zones, hits 2,000 nits peak HDR brightness, and runs at 120Hz with adaptive sync. It's a genuine pro display and the replacement for the discontinued Pro Display XDR. For photographers, colorists, and video editors working in HDR, it's worth a serious look. For general Mac use, it's more monitor than most people need.
Multiple reviewers noted the base Studio Display update was minimal. The competition now offers comparable image quality at half the price or less.
The Studio Display still has real advantages: a 12-megapixel Center Stage camera, a six-speaker audio system, three-microphone array, True Tone color matching, and the tightest macOS integration of any monitor. If you do a lot of video calls and want everything built into the display, it earns its place. But if you just need a sharp, color-accurate screen for work — and you're willing to use a separate webcam — you're paying a significant premium for built-in peripherals you may not need.
One more option worth knowing about: Apple's 2022 Studio Display is now discontinued, and refurbished units are starting to appear at Apple's refurbished store and on Amazon. If you want the Apple experience at a lower price and don't need the webcam upgrade, a refurb 2022 model in the $1,300–$1,400 range could be a reasonable choice.
This is the question I'm getting from clients right now, and the answer depends on what you need.
If you need a Mac-optimized monitor today and don't care about gaming features, the current options are already excellent. The ViewSonic VP2788-5K (~$930) and ASUS ProArt PA27JCV (~$730) are strong values at today's prices. The monitors in the pipeline are mostly gaming-oriented — high refresh rates and dual-mode switching that won't matter for a MacBook Pro productivity workflow.
Several major monitors announced at CES 2026 are expected to ship in Q1–Q2, and their arrival will put price pressure on existing models:
When these ship, the ViewSonic and ASUS ProArt could both see further discounts. Memorial Day sales in late May are also a reliable window for monitor deals, especially on models that have been on shelves for a few months.
The MSI MAG 271KPD7 at $499 would be a category-shifting price point — but there's no confirmed release date yet. If you're patient and don't mind keeping your MacBook plugged into a separate charger, it could be worth the wait. Amazon Prime Day in mid-July is another discount window worth watching if timing lines up.
For most Mac users who need a monitor today, the ViewSonic VP2788-5K is the best overall pick. It gives you Thunderbolt 4, 100W charging, daisy-chain support, and Pantone-validated color — all for about $930. One cable, great color, no compromises.
If budget matters most, the ASUS ProArt PA27JCV at $729 gives you 90% of the experience at half the Apple price.
And the one thing I'd actively advise against right now: paying $1,599 for the base Apple Studio Display with its tilt-only stand. The value gap between Apple and the competition has never been wider.
Sources
Apple Studio Display — Apple
ViewSonic VP2788-5K Display Review — MacRumors
BenQ PD2730S 5K Designer Monitor Review — MacRumors
ASUS ProArt Display 5K Review — PCWorld
BenQ MA270S 5K Glossy Monitor — 9to5Mac
New Monitors in 2026: What to Expect — DisplayNinja
2022 vs 2026 Studio Display — AppleInsider
Prepared March 2026. Monitor prices and availability change frequently — verify current details at the links above.