Apple Malaysia Back To School 2026 Promotion: Mac, iPad, And Apple Watch Discounts

Students who buy an eligible Mac or iPad get an Apple Gift Card valued from RM400-RM600 to use toward a future purchase.

Apple has officially kicked off its annual Back to School promotion for 2026 in Malaysia, offering students and educators some fantastic incentives to upgrade their tech setup before the new term begins. The campaign brings enticing education discounts across a wide range of devices, including Macs, iPads, and, for the very first time, the Apple Watch.

The headline offer this year centres on Apple Gift Cards. Students who purchase a qualifying Mac or iPad will receive a complimentary gift card valued between RM400 and RM600. This allow buyers to put those savings directly toward essential accessories like an Apple Pencil, a sleek keyboard case, or even the peace of mind that comes with an AppleCare+ protection plan.

Furthermore, the tech giant has expanded its educational pricing scheme to include the Apple Watch. This marks the first time students can secure discounted rates on Apple wearables, whether shopping online or browsing in person at a physical retail store.

(credit: Apple)

To sweeten the deal on the software front, Apple is also launching the Apple Creator Studio. This bundle, which packages creative and productivity applications for video, photography, and music, is priced at a modest RM9.90 per month for both students and teaching staff.

(credit: Apple)

To help keep all those lecture notes and creative projects backup and secure, Apple is throwing in three months of free iCloud+ storage at the 50GB tier. This offer runs from June through to the end of August and is available to new subscribers, those currently on the free 5GB plan, and returning customers. To claim this cloud storage bonus, you will just need to make a quick trip to an authorised Apple Retail store.

The promotion is currently live and running through both the online Apple Education Store and physical Apple Retail locations across Malaysia.