Skip to main content

MacBook Pro owners file class action lawsuit over keyboard issues

MacBook Pro Touch Bar
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Thousands of MacBook Pro owners have started a petition to encourage Apple to recall their MacBook Pros following continued difficulties with the laptop’s keyboard. Declaring all MacBook Pro keyboards since late 2016 defective due to a failure in the butterfly mechanism supporting each key, the petition demands that Apple recall the laptops — and replace the keyboards with something new “that just works.”

Some of those users have gone beyond tweets and online petitions. CNET reports that a group of customers have filed a class action lawsuit against Apple. The lawsuit, which was filed in Northern California’s U.S. District Court, alleges that Apple failed to warn consumers about the flaws in its butterfly keyboards.

Recommended Videos

In the never-ending race to make the slimmest and lightest laptops, Apple, alongside other manufacturers, has been trimming the fat on its notebooks for years. One way Apple did so in recent generations of the MacBook Pro was to redesign the keyboard with a new “butterfly” switch of its own making. Despite a few iterations, failure rates have skyrocketed and MacBook Pro users claim that all of them are at risk of breaking or becoming stuck due to their innate fragility.

Like most of Apple’s laptops, the MacBook Pros have very poor user-repairability ratings, so those faced with sticky or stuck keys have been forced to go down the official Apple repair route. As VentureBeat highlights, those repairs can be expensive, with some users quoted as much as $700 for the fix. That, according to the authors of the petition, is simply not good enough, and they’re demanding that Apple do something about it.

The petition has so far been signed by over 20,000 people and quotes a number of MacBook Pro owners who have run into various keyboard issues, from sticky keys to defective keys to those who have found their MacBook Pro entirely unusable because of keyboard failure. They demand not only a replacement program and recall for all MacBook Pros sold since late 2016, but a fully redesigned keyboard.

If enacted, such a recall would be of an enormous scale and could cost Apple dearly. But it’s not like Apple doesn’t do product recalls when it encounters significant problems with its hardware. It recently announced a recall of the 13-inch MacBook Pro due to potential problems with its battery. That MacBook Pro is limited to the non-touch-bar version and only those produced between October 2016 and October 2017. A recall of all MacBook Pros for keyboard replacement would be on a far grander scale.

Updated on May 13: Included information regarding a lawsuit filed against Apple. 

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is a freelance evergreen writer and occasional section coordinator, covering how to guides, best-of lists, and…
The M4 MacBook Pro is apparently listed for sale on Facebook — but I don’t buy it
An open MacBook Pro on a table.

According to analysts and industry experts like Mark Gurman and Ming-Chi Kuo, Apple is expected to announce an M4 refresh of the MacBook Pro possibly this month and most likely before the end of the year. No event announcements have come yet, though Apple has historically held an October Mac event. But now, an online leak discovered by Wccftech claims the new model is up for sale on a private Facebook group. The claim is backed up by alleged images of the retail box, but there's plenty to be suspicious about.

While the images were posted by known leaker ShrimpApplePro, the information was sent to them from an unknown source. There are two posts so far, one with an image of the back of the retail box -- with comments from AppleShrimpPro saying to take it with asome skepticism -- and one showing additional images and claiming it's for sale on Facebook.

Read more
Your 2018 MacBook Air is officially ‘vintage’
apple 2015 notebook market share macbook close up snow leopard mac

Apple has added 12 more Macs to its vintage and obsolete lists, affecting the hardware service users can access. If your Mac has joined one of the lists, it could become harder to get it repaired by Apple.

As spotted by MacRumors, these three Macs have been added to the vintage list:

Read more
There’s more good news about the upcoming M4 MacBook Pros
Apple MacBook Pro 16 front angled view showing display and keyboard.

According to a report from Taiwan's DigiTimes, Apple has begun mass production of new MacBook Pro models with 14-inch and 16-inch screens and M4 Pro and M4 Max chips.

This is consistent with information from other industry analysts such as Ross Young and Mark Gurman, who both expect the M4 MacBook Pros to launch later this year.

Read more