The three eBay listings under consideration are the exact same computer: a 14-inch MacBook Pro, M3, 16GB memory, 512GB storage.
So this was never a specs decision. It comes down to price, condition, and who stands behind it if something breaks. One of the three wins on all three. And if you are open to looking slightly wider, the same money buys a meaningfully more capable machine.
It is the cheapest of the three, it is the only one of its sellers backed by a full year of warranty, and it does everything the work needs. The two things it does not list, battery health and a photo of the exact unit, are both covered by a quick seller message and a free 30-day return.
Identical machines, so only these rows matter. Every listing is clickable. The winning column is shaded.
| 01 · Space Gray | 02 · Silver | 03 · Silver | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | $859.99 | $879.99 | $899.99 |
| True cost, all in | $859.99 | $879.99 | ~$970–$1,077 + charger, + 1-yr plan |
| Condition | Good · eBay Refurbished | Good · eBay Refurbished | Used (seller grade “Good”) |
| Battery disclosed | No · “normal” only | No · “normal” only | Yes · 94%, 110 cycles |
| Screen note | Slight pink tint | Light delamination | Minor wear, none flagged |
| Charger | Included | Included | Not included |
| Warranty | 1 year (Allstate) | 1 year (Allstate) | 30 days (1 yr = +$107) |
| Returns | 30 days, seller pays | 30 days, seller pays | 30 days, seller pays |
| Seller | ItsWorthMore 99.6% · 161K · Top Rated | ItsWorthMore 99.6% · 161K · Top Rated | PayMore 99.5% · 4.9K · Top Rated |
| Open the listing | View on eBay ↗ | View on eBay ↗ | View on eBay ↗ |
Why 01 wins: cheapest, with the one thing a used Mac almost never carries, a full year of warranty, plus a charger and free returns. Its only flaw is a slight pink screen tint, which is cosmetic and covered by the coverage and the return window. 02 is the same seller and warranty for $20 more, but its flaw is screen delamination, which can spread, so it places second. 03 is the only one that shows battery health, and it is excellent (94%, 110 cycles), but it has no charger and only 30 days of coverage, pushing its real cost over $1,000.
One computer has to carry two jobs: shipping an app to a public beta, and running Logic Pro for coursework. As of mid-2026 there are firm requirements behind both, and they rule out a lot of cheaper machines.
Since April 28, 2026, Apple rejects any TestFlight or App Store upload not built with Xcode 26 and the iOS 26 SDK. Xcode 26 requires macOS Sequoia 15.6 or newer, which means Apple Silicon. No Intel Mac can upload a build anymore.
The current Logic Pro (12.2) requires macOS 15.6 or later and a Mac with Apple Silicon. Its sound library is 44GB and up. Between Logic and Xcode, the machine must be Apple Silicon on a current macOS, full stop.
The base 14″ M3 and 13″ M2 ship with 8GB standard, which is below the floor for running Xcode plus Logic. Never buy on price alone. Confirm 16GB in the title or specs.
Each of the three is a 14″ M3 · 16GB · 512GB on current macOS, so they clear every requirement above. The $859 pick is fully viable for both jobs.
Apple's chip names hide the real order. An older “Pro” chip with 32GB beats a newer “base” chip, and even beats the newer M3 Pro, for the same money or less. A full eBay-first sweep of every Pro and Max tier under $1,000, against the requirements above, found the actual sweet spot. The part that matters is not the chip year, it is 32GB of memory, the amount that lets Xcode, Logic, and the simulators run at once without choking.
| Budget | Best chip here | What you actually get |
|---|---|---|
| ~$600 | M1 Pro · 16GB | 6 to 8 performance cores, 200GB/s, dual displays. Already beats the $860 M3 base. The ceiling here is 16GB, which is the limiter for running everything at once. |
| ~$700 | M1 Pro · 32GB (16″) | The comfort tier appears: 8 performance cores plus 32GB. This is where the build-plus-Logic-plus-simulator workload stops being memory-starved. The highest-leverage band. |
| ~$775 | M1 Pro · 32GB + warranty | The pick. Same 8 performance cores and 32GB, now with a 1-year warranty. Or stretch to a 32GB M1 Max near $825 for 400GB/s and a 1TB drive if you want bandwidth and storage headroom. |
| ~$900–1,000 | Clean M1 Max 32GB / M2 Pro 32GB | Full-budget plays. Avoid the traps that live here: the M3 Pro (~$940, only 5 to 6 performance cores and regressed 150GB/s) and the M3 base (~$860). Newest names, worst value in the band. |
How to read this: the three M3 listings at the top are the simplest buy, lowest price on the exact machine in hand. If the goal is the most machine per dollar, the $774 16-inch M1 Pro with 32GB is the smart-money pick, more cores, double the memory, and a warranty, for less than the base M3. The $605 M1 Pro is the budget floor, and the M3 Pro is the one to skip. Live prices move, so confirm on the listing before buying, and verify battery and cosmetics on any pre-owned unit.
Most buyers pay extra for a second screen, a control surface, and test devices. An existing iPad Pro and iPhone cover all three. Signed into the same Apple Account, they turn a single laptop into a multi-screen, audio-control, real-device setup at no added cost.
The full path to shipping, and the machine's verdict at each stage. The toolchain is heavy on disk, light on everything else, which is why 16GB and a clean 512GB drive are the floors that matter.
Whichever machine wins, it is the right start. These are scaling moves for when budget opens up, not corrections. Two cheap wins now, one real machine later.