Adobe Premiere Pro All Mac World 〈UHD – 360p〉
Your workflow is glued to After Effects and you have a Mac Studio or M2/M3 Pro with 32GB+ RAM. Avoid it if: You want the fastest possible render times or you only own a base-spec MacBook Air.
With the advent of Apple Silicon (M1, M2, M3, M4), Adobe has rewritten Premiere Pro from the ground up to run natively. The question isn't if it works on a Mac anymore—it’s whether it works better than Final Cut Pro. adobe premiere pro all mac world
If you live in the "All Mac World," you know the old pain: Premiere Pro used to turn your Intel Mac into a space heater with a spinning beach ball of death. That era is dead. Your workflow is glued to After Effects and
Adobe has done the impossible: they made Premiere feel like a native Mac app again. It doesn't hog the CPU, it respects the trackpad gestures, and it exports ProRes like a demon. The question isn't if it works on a
But Apple Silicon’s fixed RAM and lack of eGPU support mean Premiere will always be a second-class citizen to Final Cut Pro on raw performance. You use Premiere on a Mac because your job demands Adobe—not because it’s the best tool for the machine.
Unlike Windows PCs that choke when you run out of VRAM, Macs use Unified Memory. A Mac with 64GB of RAM lets Premiere share that pool between CPU and GPU. For heavy After Effects dynamic links or Lumetri color grading layers, this means fewer crashes than on PC (dare we say it).
Historically, Premiere on Mac was buggier than on PC. That has flipped. Recently (2024-2025), the Windows version has seen more crashes, while the Mac version is oddly stable. However, a specific Mac bug remains: Exporting to H.264 with hardware encoding sometimes produces glitched frames on M3/M4 chips. You have to switch to Software Encoding—which is slow.