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macOS Tahoe

macOS Tahoe (version 26) is the twenty-second major release of Apple's macOS operating system. The successor to macOS Sequoia, it was announced at WWDC 2025 on June 9, 2025, and its first developer beta was released the same day. It was released on September 15, 2025.

Tahoe is the final version of macOS that supports Macs with Intel processors; the 2020 iMac, the 2019 16-inch MacBook Pro, the 2020 4-port 13-inch MacBook Pro, and the 2019 Mac Pro models are supported. Future versions will work only on Macs with Apple silicon systems on a chip (SoCs). It is the first version of macOS since Mac OS X Snow Leopard that cannot be upgraded from an older version via the Mac App Store; upgrading it is exclusively available through the System Settings software update preference pane, as is the case with iOS.

Development

macOS Tahoe was announced by Apple's senior vice president of software engineering Craig Federighi at the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on June 9, 2025.

At the conference, Apple announced that it was unifying the version numbers of its operating systems by designating them all with the year after their release, like vehicle model years. Federighi said that macOS versions will still primarily be marketed using release names, such as "Tahoe".

The release is named after Lake Tahoe, a lake that straddles the border of California and Nevada, continuing Apple's practice of naming macOS releases for locations in its home state.

Supported hardware

macOS Tahoe supports all Macs with Apple silicon and some of those with Intel's 9th-generation Coffee Lake Refresh, 10th-generation Ice Lake and Comet Lake, and Cascade Lake–based Xeon-W processors, including:

Apple Intelligence requires a Mac with Apple silicon.

During its Platforms State of the Union event at WWDC 2025, Apple announced that macOS Tahoe will be the last major version of macOS that supports Intel-based Macs. The only remaining Intel-based Macs supported by Tahoe are the Mac Pro (2019), the MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2019), the MacBook Pro (13-inch, 2020, four Thunderbolt 3 ports) and the iMac (2020), thus ending support for all Intel-based MacBook Air and Mac mini models.

Features

System features

User Interface

The user interface has been substantially redesigned for the first time since macOS Big Sur in 2020, using the Liquid Glass design language. This aligns with Apple's iOS 26 and iPadOS 26.

Desktop, Lock Screen & Control Center

Spotlight

Other new features

New apps

Removed features

Release History

Previous release Current release Current beta release Security response
macOS Tahoe Releases
Version Build Release Date Darwin Version Release Notes

User Interface

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