Lisa · The Beige Era · 1985

Macintosh XL

Apple renamed remaining Lisas as the Macintosh XL and shipped MacWorks so they could run Mac apps. It was powerful, expensive and gone almost immediately.

Macintosh XL (1985), Lisa by Apple

Macintosh XL: key facts

When was the Macintosh XL released?

The Macintosh XL was released in January 1985. Apple discontinued it in April 1985.

How much did the Macintosh XL cost?

The Macintosh XL launched at $3,995 in 1985 — about $11,885 in today’s money (approximate, US CPI).

What are the Macintosh XL’s specs?

The Macintosh XL used a Motorola 68000 running at 5 MHz, with 512 KB of memory and 10 MB of storage. It ran MacWorks XL.

Why does the Macintosh XL matter?

A Lisa repackaged to run Macintosh software.

Full specifications

CPUMotorola 68000 · 5 MHz
Cores1
Memory (RAM)512 KB (up to 2 MB)
Storage10 MB
Display12" monochrome, 720×364
GPUIntegrated / NuBus video
Ports3.5-inch floppy, hard disk, serial
WeightVaries by configuration
DimensionsDesktop computer
Operating systemMacWorks XL
ReleasedJanuary 1985
DiscontinuedApril 1985
Launch price$3,995

How the Macintosh XL compares to today

A 16 GB Apple Silicon MacBook Pro has about 32,800× more memory than this device shipped with.

At 5 MHz, the clock is roughly 640× slower than a single performance core of a 16 GB Apple Silicon MacBook Pro — and that is before counting cores, width and IPC.

All of this storage holds about 3 modern phone photos.

Launched at $3,995 in 1985 — about $11,885 in today’s money (approx., US CPI).

Cross-architecture speed figures are clock-only and approximate; inflation figures use US CPI.

Did you know?

Its larger screen made many early Mac users jealous.

Related Lisa models

Open the Macintosh XL in the interactive archive →

Last updated: 2026-06-27