How to Restart MacBook If the Screen Is Frozen (6 Methods)

How to Restart MacBook If the Screen Is Frozen: 6 Proven Methods

Learning how to restart macbook if the screen is frozen can save you from panic. A frozen screen happens to every Mac user eventually. The mouse does not move. Keyboard shortcuts seem ignored. You cannot click anything. Do not worry. You have several options to force a restart, even when the display is completely unresponsive or black.

This guide covers six methods. They work on all MacBook models (Air, Pro, 2016–2026). No external tools needed. Just your keyboard and a little patience.

Important: These steps force a restart. Any unsaved work will be lost. Save your work regularly to avoid data loss.

Method One: Force Shutdown Using the Power Button (All MacBooks)

The most reliable way to restart a frozen MacBook is a forced shutdown. Unlike a normal shutdown, this cuts power immediately.

Steps:

  1. Press and hold the Power button (also called Touch ID button on newer models). It is located on the top‑right corner of the keyboard, above the delete key.
  2. Keep holding for ten full seconds. Count slowly: one, two, three… ten.
  3. Release the button. The MacBook should turn off completely. The screen goes black. Fans stop.
  4. Wait five seconds. Press the Power button again normally to turn it back on.

What if the screen is already black? Still hold the Power button for ten seconds. You will hear the fans spin down or feel a click. Then restart normally.

This method works even if the display shows nothing. For more on Mac power issues, see our MacBook black screen troubleshooting cluster post.

Method Two: Force Quit Frozen Apps Without Restarting

Sometimes the whole system is not frozen – only one app. Before restarting the entire MacBook, try force‑quitting the problematic app.

Steps:

  1. Press Command + Option + Esc (Escape key). This opens the Force Quit Applications window.
  2. Use the arrow keys to select the frozen app (e.g., Safari, Photoshop).
  3. Press Enter or click Force Quit (if the mouse works).
  4. Repeat for any other frozen apps.

This shortcut often works even when the mouse is unresponsive. If the Force Quit window does not appear, the entire system may be frozen. Proceed to Method One or Three.

For a detailed list of keyboard shortcuts, see our Mac keyboard shortcuts for freezing cluster post.

Method Three: Control + Command + Power Button (For Touch Bar Models)

On MacBooks with a Touch Bar (2016–2020 models), the physical power button is also the Touch ID sensor. There is a specific shortcut for forcing a restart without a ten‑second hold.

Steps:

  1. Press and hold Control + Command + Power/Touch ID button simultaneously.
  2. Hold for about three seconds. The screen goes black.
  3. Release the keys. The MacBook restarts automatically.

This shortcut works only on Touch Bar MacBooks. If you have a newer MacBook (2021–2026) with a physical function row, use Method One.

For identifying your MacBook model, see our MacBook model identification guide.

Method Four: Use the Escape Key + Power (Older MacBooks)

Some older MacBook models (pre‑2016) respond to a different combination.

Steps:

  1. Press and hold Escape (Esc) + Power button together.
  2. Hold for ten seconds.
  3. Release. The MacBook shuts down.
  4. Press Power to restart.

This method is less common but worth trying if Methods One and Three do not work.

Method Five: SMC Reset When Screen Is Frozen

The System Management Controller (SMC) manages power, battery, and sleep functions. If your MacBook is frozen and also not charging or waking from sleep, resetting the SMC can help.

For MacBooks with Apple Silicon (M1, M2, M3, M4 chips): You do not need to reset SMC. Simply shut down and restart. The chip handles it automatically.

For Intel MacBooks with T2 chip (2018–2020):

  1. Shut down the Mac (use forced method if needed).
  2. Hold Control + Option + Shift (right side of keyboard) for seven seconds.
  3. Keep holding those keys, then also press and hold the Power button for another seven seconds.
  4. Release all keys. Wait a few seconds. Press Power to restart.

For older Intel MacBooks (pre‑2018):

  1. Shut down.
  2. Hold Shift + Control + Option + Power for ten seconds.
  3. Release all keys. Press Power to restart.

After an SMC reset, your MacBook may take longer to boot the first time. That is normal.

For more on SMC and NVRAM resets, see our when to reset SMC on Mac cluster post.

Method Six: Start in Safe Mode to Diagnose

If your MacBook restarts but freezes again, boot into Safe Mode. This disables non‑essential software and can help identify the cause.

Steps to boot into Safe Mode:

  1. After a forced shutdown, press the Power button to turn on the Mac.
  2. Immediately press and hold the Shift key.
  3. Keep holding until you see the login screen (may take longer than usual).
  4. Log in. The screen may say “Safe Boot” in the menu bar.

In Safe Mode, test if the freezing stops. If the Mac works normally, a third‑party app or driver is the culprit. Uninstall recently added software.

For a complete Safe Mode guide, see our how to use Mac Safe Mode cluster post.

What to Do If the MacBook Restarts but Freezes Again

If your Mac repeatedly freezes after restart:

  • Disconnect all peripherals (USB drives, external monitors, printers). Faulty hardware can cause freezing.
  • Run Disk Utility to check for disk errors. Restart, hold Command + R to enter Recovery Mode, then open Disk Utility and run First Aid.
  • Reinstall macOS (as a last resort). Back up your data first.

For step‑by‑step recovery instructions, see our macOS recovery mode guide.

How to Prevent Future Freezes

  • Keep macOS updated – Apple fixes known freeze bugs.
  • Avoid running too many apps at once – memory pressure causes stalls.
  • Check Activity Monitor for apps using high CPU (look for “not responding”).
  • Reset NVRAM/PRAM occasionally (Intel only). Shut down, then press Option + Command + P + R at startup.
  • Free up disk space – leave at least 10% of your drive empty.

For a maintenance checklist, see our Mac performance optimization guide.

The Bottom Line

Knowing how to restart macbook if the screen is frozen gives you confidence. Start with the ten‑second Power button hold – it works on every MacBook. If that fails, try Control + Command + Power (Touch Bar models). Use Force Quit (Command + Option + Esc) for single frozen apps. For recurring freezes, boot into Safe Mode or reset the SMC.

Bookmark this guide. When the freeze happens, you will know exactly what to do.

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