macOS Tahoe (version 26) is the upcoming twenty-second major release of
Apple's macOS operating system. The successor to macOS Sequoia (macOS 15),
it was first announced at WWDC 2025 on June 9, 2025, with its first
developer beta released the same day. In line with Apple's practice of
naming macOS releases after landmarks in California, it is named after
Tahoe, a lake straddling the border between California and Nevada.
Developed by: Apple Computer, Inc.
General availability: Not available yet, in beta stage.
Support status: In developer beta. Drops support for the 2017 iMac Pro,
2018 Mac Mini, 2018 MacBook Pro, 2019 13” and 15” MacBook Pro, 2020 Two
Thunderbolt 3 Port 13” MacBook Pro, 2019 iMac, and the 2020 Intel
MacBook Air.
Tahoe will be the last version of macOS to support Macs with Intel
processors, with support further-limited to selected iMac, MacBook Pro,
and Mac Pro models; all future versions will only support Apple silicon.
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:
MacBook Air (M1, 2020) or later
MacBook Pro (13-inch, 2020, four Thunderbolt 3 ports) or later
MacBook Pro (14-inch, 2021) or later
MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2019) or later
Mac Mini (M1, 2020) or later
iMac (2020) or later
Mac Pro (2019) or later
All Mac Studio models
During its Platforms State of the Union event at WWDC 2025, Apple
announced that macOS Tahoe will be the last 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 Intel-based MacBook Air and Mac Mini
models.
Features
macOS Tahoe introduces several new features and improvements, mainly
focused on the user interface:
The UI has been completely redesigned for the first time since macOS
Big Sur to use Liquid Glass, making it more consistent with Apple's
other platforms, which also receive it. The menu bar is now fully
transparent by default. The cursor has been redesigned, now having a
more rounded appearance. App icons have been unified with iOS and
iPadOS, and can have dark and tinted variants as introduced in iOS
with iOS 18/iPadOS 18, as well as a new clear variant.
Some system sound effects are refined.
Folder icons have been redesigned and can now have custom colors,
emblems, and emojis, and can also abide to the accent color. They also
now have animations.
Spotlight Search has been redesigned and gains quick actions,
"quick-key" shortcuts, menubar search, and Apple Intelligence
integration.
Many iOS and iPadOS features have been brought over to the Mac, such
as Live Activities and compact brightness/audio indicators.
The Phone and Journal apps are now included as part of macOS. The
Phone app uses Continuity to integrate with the iPhone.
The Control Center has been redesigned, now functioning like and
resembling the iOS version introduced in iOS 18/iPadOS 18.
The Launchpad, introduced in OS X Lion and mostly unchanged
afterwards, has been removed and replaced by the Applications feature
which is similar to the App Library, used on iOS since iOS 14 and
iPadOS since iPadOS 15. It is integrated into the Spotlight interface.
iPhone apps also appear in the Applications list through Continuity
from the user's iPhone, and will launch through iPhone Mirroring.
Areas such as the Control Center, app opening and Spotlight Search now
has increased animation.
A Magnifier app, Vehicle Motion Cues, a system-wide Accessibility
Reader, and support for Braille displays comes as part of expanded
accessibility features.
Some Lock Screen customisation features on iOS/iPadOS have been
brought over to the Mac such as changing the color and font of the
clock.
Terminal gains support for 24-bit color and Powerline fonts.
Removed features
Home only supports the redesigned architecture introduced with iOS 16
and macOS Ventura and ends support for the legacy architecture.
Support for FireWire 400/800 has been removed.
Release History
Previous release
Current release
Current beta release
Security response
Version
Build
Release date
Darwin version
26.0 beta 1
25A5279m
June 9, 2025
25.0.0 xnu-12377.0.81.0.3~308 Fri May 30 19:29:53 PDT 2025
26.0 beta 2
25A5295e
June 23, 2025
25.0.0 xnu-12377.0.122.0.1~120 Fri Jun 17 00:08:05 PDT
2025
26.0 beta 3
25A5306g
July 7, 2025
25.0.0 xnu-12377.0.132.0.2~69 Mon Jun 30 22:07:51 PDT 2025