macOS Recovery Mode Guide: Boot, Repair, Reinstall (2026)

macOS Recovery Mode Guide: Boot, Repair Disk, and Reinstall macOS

This macos recovery mode guide walks you through one of the most powerful built‑in tools on any Mac. Recovery Mode is a separate partition (or internet‑based system) that lets you repair your startup disk, reinstall macOS without erasing personal files, restore from a Time Machine backup, and access advanced terminal commands. If your Mac won’t start normally, or if you want to wipe it clean, Recovery Mode is where you go.

For basic freezing issues, see our pillar post how to restart macbook if the screen is frozen. For diagnostic boots, see how to use mac safe mode. This guide focuses exclusively on Recovery Mode.

What Is macOS Recovery Mode?

Recovery Mode is a minimal macOS environment that runs from a hidden partition on your startup disk (or downloads over the internet if that partition is damaged). It includes a set of utilities:

  • Disk Utility – repair or erase disks.
  • Reinstall macOS – install a fresh copy of the operating system.
  • Time Machine System Restore – recover your entire system from a backup.
  • Startup Security Utility – manage Secure Boot and external boot permissions.
  • Terminal – run advanced commands (for experienced users).
  • Get Help Online – opens Safari to Apple’s support website (requires Wi‑Fi).

You do not need a working macOS installation to enter Recovery Mode. As long as the hardware is functional, you can boot into it.

When Should You Use Recovery Mode?

Use Recovery Mode in these situations:

  • Your Mac freezes during startup – Recovery Mode may still work.
  • You need to repair the disk (run First Aid on your startup drive).
  • You want to erase your Mac completely (before selling or trade‑in).
  • macOS is corrupted and you need to reinstall it.
  • You have a Time Machine backup and want to restore the entire system.
  • You forgot your firmware password (need to reset it – advanced, not covered here).
  • You need to change security settings (e.g., allow booting from external drives).

For recurring startup freezes, first try Safe Mode (see our how to use mac safe mode). If that fails, Recovery Mode is your next step.

How to Boot into Recovery Mode on Intel Macs

The classic method works on all Intel Macs (2006–2020).

Steps:

  1. Shut down your Mac completely.
  2. Press the Power button to turn it on.
  3. Immediately press and hold Command (⌘) + R on your keyboard. Do not release.
  4. Keep holding until you see the Apple logo, a spinning globe, or the Recovery Mode utilities window. This usually takes 30–60 seconds.
  5. Release the keys when the macOS Utilities window appears.

What if you see a globe? That means the built‑in recovery partition is missing or damaged, and your Mac is using Internet Recovery. It will download a recovery image from Apple (requires Wi‑Fi or Ethernet). This takes longer (5–15 minutes).

Tip: For Internet Recovery on Intel, use Option + Command + R to get the latest compatible macOS version, or Shift + Option + Command + R to get the version that came with your Mac.

How to Boot into Recovery Mode on Apple Silicon Macs (M1, M2, M3, M4)

Apple Silicon Macs use a different process. There is no Command+R shortcut at startup.

Steps:

  1. Shut down your Mac (Apple menu > Shut Down).
  2. Press and hold the Power button (or Touch ID button) until you see “Loading startup options” on the screen. This takes about ten seconds.
  3. Release Power. You will see a window showing your startup disk(s) and a gear icon labeled Options.
  4. Click Options, then click Continue.
  5. Enter your administrator password (if prompted).
  6. The macOS Utilities window appears.

Note: If you have a firmware password enabled, you must enter it before the startup options appear.

What to Do in Recovery Mode – The Four Main Utilities

1. Disk Utility – Repair or Erase Your Disk

Disk Utility is the first tool to try if your Mac is freezing or crashing. It checks and repairs disk errors.

Steps to run First Aid:

  1. In the macOS Utilities window, select Disk Utility > Continue.
  2. In the sidebar, select your startup disk (usually “Macintosh HD”).
  3. Click the First Aid button at the top.
  4. Click Run (then Run again if prompted).
  5. Wait for the process to complete. It may take 5–20 minutes.
  6. When finished, click Done. If errors were found and fixed, restart normally and see if the problem is resolved.

To erase your disk (for clean install or selling):

  1. In Disk Utility, select View > Show All Devices.
  2. Select the topmost drive (e.g., “Apple SSD …”).
  3. Click Erase. Choose format: APFS (for modern Macs) or Mac OS Extended (Journaled) for older Macs.
  4. Name it “Macintosh HD” (or anything).
  5. Click Erase. This deletes all data permanently.

For more Disk Utility tips, see our Mac performance optimization guide.

2. Reinstall macOS – Install Fresh Without Losing Personal Files

This option reinstalls the operating system while preserving your personal data (if you do not erase the disk first). It is useful when macOS is corrupted but you want to keep your documents and apps.

Steps:

  1. In the macOS Utilities window, select Reinstall macOS > Continue.
  2. Click Continue through the introduction screens.
  3. Agree to the software license agreement.
  4. Select your startup disk (e.g., “Macintosh HD”).
  5. Click Install. The installation downloads from Apple (requires internet) and takes 30–60 minutes.
  6. Your Mac will restart several times. After completion, log in as usual. Your files remain intact.

Important: This works only if you do NOT erase the disk first. If you erased the disk, you will get a clean installation with no data.

3. Restore from Time Machine Backup

If you have a Time Machine backup on an external drive, you can restore your entire system to that snapshot.

Steps:

  1. Connect your Time Machine backup drive.
  2. In macOS Utilities, select Restore from Time Machine Backup > Continue.
  3. Click Continue again.
  4. Select your backup source (the external drive) and click Continue.
  5. Choose a specific backup date (most recent is usually best).
  6. Click Continue. The restoration process takes 30–90 minutes depending on backup size.

After completion, your Mac will be exactly as it was on that backup date – including apps, settings, and files.

4. Terminal – Advanced Commands

Terminal in Recovery Mode gives you access to command‑line tools without booting the full system. This is for advanced users. Common uses:

  • Reset a user password (type resetpassword and follow prompts).
  • Enable or disable System Integrity Protection (csrutil enable/disable).
  • Check disk in more detail (use diskutil list and fsck).

If you are not comfortable with Terminal, avoid it. One wrong command can erase data.

Recovery Mode on Intel: Other Keyboard Shortcuts

ShortcutWhat It Does
Command + RStandard Recovery Mode (version that came with your Mac or latest compatible)
Option + Command + RInternet Recovery – installs the latest macOS version compatible with your Mac
Shift + Option + Command + RInternet Recovery – installs the macOS version that came with your Mac (original)

These shortcuts only work on Intel Macs. Apple Silicon Macs do not use them – use the Power button method.

What to Do If Recovery Mode Does Not Work

If you cannot boot into Recovery Mode:

  • On Intel: Try Internet Recovery (Option + Command + R). Make sure you have a stable Wi‑Fi or Ethernet connection.
  • On Apple Silicon: If pressing Power button shows nothing (black screen), try an external display (see our MacBook black screen fix). The internal display may be dead.
  • Reset NVRAM (Intel) – corrupted settings can block Recovery Mode.
  • Reset SMC (Intel) – power issues can prevent booting.
  • Create a bootable USB installer (using another Mac). This is more advanced but works if all else fails. Search Apple Support for instructions (external – we do not link, but you can search).

If nothing works, the hardware may be failing. Contact Apple Support or visit a repair shop.

How to Exit Recovery Mode

Exiting is simple:

  • Click Apple logo in the top‑left corner of the utilities window.
  • Select Restart or Shut Down.

Do not just close the lid. Restart properly. If you made changes (e.g., erased disk), you will need to reinstall macOS or restore from backup before normal startup.

Recovery Mode vs Safe Mode – Quick Recap

FeatureRecovery ModeSafe Mode
Boot fromRecovery partition (or internet)Startup disk
Can repair diskYes (Disk Utility)No (but validates disk on boot)
Can reinstall macOSYesNo
Can restore Time MachineYesNo
Affects personal dataOnly if you erase or restoreNo (keeps all data)
Use when…Mac won’t start, need major repairMac starts but freezes or is slow

For most software conflicts, start with Safe Mode. For disk errors or macOS corruption, use Recovery Mode.

The Bottom Line

This macos recovery mode guide gives you the power to fix startup problems, repair disks, and reinstall the operating system. On Intel Macs, use Command+R. On Apple Silicon, hold Power button then select Options. Inside Recovery Mode, Disk Utility is your best friend for repairing disks. Reinstall macOS when the system is corrupted but your data is fine. Restore from Time Machine when you want to go back to a working snapshot. For more recovery options, see our how to use mac safe mode and when to reset smc on mac.

Bookmark this guide. When your Mac refuses to start, Recovery Mode is often the solution.

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