After you’ve settled on a model and the specs you need, there’s still one more important decision to make before you buy a MacBook Pro: silver vs. space black. And with the MacBook Air, you have three more options (sky blue, midnight and starlight).
If you want an attractive and cohesive setup, the color of your Mac is the centerpiece of the whole look.
Which color is best? I always go with silver — but here are some things to consider before you make your decision.
Space black vs. silver MacBook: Which is better?
Neither is objectively better than the other — context is always important. What color are the other devices and peripherals on your desk? What color is the room and furniture it’ll primarily stay around?
Silver is the color I most closely associate with Apple laptops, starting with the titanium PowerBook G4 from 2001. Just as black is associated with IBM’s ThinkPads, so silver calls to mind Apple laptops. Silver is classic. It’s timeless. It looks professional, high-end and high-tech.
Silver is also a chameleon. It pairs very well with both white and black. Its light, reflective finish looks great next to a pair of white AirPods or headphones. Matched with my black display, silver and black keyboard and black RAID disk; my silver Mac mini has strong contrast.

Pick your color, perfect your setup
Apple has also made lots of dark-colored laptops, of course, including early PowerBooks. The space black MacBook Pro is classy and cool — but it could also be mistaken at a distance for a generic PC laptop. Also, space black doesn’t blend in as well with lighter, colorful peripherals.
But with other blacks and dark grays, space black can look cooler, moodier and more modern. As if Batman worked on a Mac.
Silver, a more natural-looking finish, looks great on a light wooden desk or nestled inside a leather bag — other natural materials. In a bright room, silver reflects the colors around it and blends in.
On the other hand, in a modern office with other solid, neutral colors, space black would blend in seamlessly. A black laptop on a black desk (especially one with a glass surface) will look really cool. A space black MacBook sitting on a light wooden table would stand out like a black void — but that could also be the look you’re going for if you want your Mac to be the visual focal point of the room.
MacBook Pro silver vs. space black: Key considerations
When picking a color for your MacBook, you should consider what other devices you have and which colors you lean toward. Nearly every Apple device comes in at least silver and a dark option, but those dark finishes aren’t consistent in name or brightness:
- On the MacBook Air, midnight is a deep blue-tinged near-black.
- The 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro both come in space black, a darker, more uniform finish with an anodization seal that helps resist fingerprints.
- The black iPhone 17 and the iPhone Air in space black look very dark; iPhone 17 Pro doesn’t offer a neutral dark color this year (just cosmic orange, deep blue and silver).
- Apple Watch Series 11 in aluminum comes in space gray, jet black, silver and rose gold; in polished titanium, it comes in natural, gold and slate.
- AirPods Max come in midnight — Apple’s dark finish, designed to coordinate with the MacBook Air’s midnight rather than match the MacBook Pro’s deeper space black.
Does space black MacBook scratch easily? What about fingerprints?
All of Apple’s MacBooks rely on aluminum anodizing for their finishes. Anodized aluminum is generally durable and resistant to scuffs and scratches. Nonetheless, aluminum is a relatively soft metal and can get scratched over time. Small scratches and scuffs tend not to show as clearly on silver-finished laptops, and are more prominent on darker finishes like space black.
Saying that, space black MacBooks don’t scratch any more easily than other colors. It’s just that scratches tend to show more easily. Scuffs and scratches typically occur around the computer’s ports and the palm rests surrounding the trackpad. To protect their MacBooks, some owners buy USB-C magnetic adapters — kind of a poor man’s MagSafe — as well as rubber port protectors.
Fingerprints, too, can prove problematic. Dark finishes like space black and midnight often show fingerprints much more prominently than silver. While fingerprint marks are easily wiped away with a microfiber cloth, they are far less visible on the lighter silver finish.
I have very oily hands — I leave fingerprints on just about every surface. Silver minimizes it as much as possible.
MacBook silver vs. space black: Cost difference
If you’re buying a MacBook new from Apple, all the colors cost the same, and all colors are available on every configuration. On the MacBook Air, silver costs the same as sky blue, midnight and starlight. With the MacBook Pro, silver costs the same as space black.
On the secondhand market or the Apple refurbished store, seeking out a specific color might yield fewer results. You might end up paying more if you’re dead set on one of the less-popular options.
On desktop Macs, your color options are more limited. It doesn’t cost anything to pick a color. However, all seven iMac colors — blue, green, pink, silver, yellow, orange and purple — are now available on every configuration. The Mac mini, Mac Studio and Mac Pro only come in silver.
MacBook Pro space black vs. silver: My pick
Personally, I always buy a silver Mac. I switched from PC to Mac in the heyday of the Intel era, and silver aluminum and black glass became the iconic Apple look in my mind.
I also like to keep my office brightly lit, with near-white walls and a light wooden pine desk (not too dissimilar to an Apple Store). In that environment, I think silver looks more fitting.
Silver is also consistent. Whereas every new Apple product in a dark finish is a slightly different shade, silver aluminum is always the same and always looks great.
MacBook space black vs. silver: Closing thoughts
Silver is more versatile and works with all kinds of peripherals and styles. Space black, if you have a more modern office with a lot of similarly colored peripherals, can look really cool and aesthetic.
Most Apple products come in some variation of these two colors, so you can coordinate your devices to look like they all belong together. Ultimately, I think there’s no wrong answer.
