Is your Mac slowing down? Try these 3 monthly resets before you give up

MacBook
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Your Mac isn't as fast as it used to be. Apps take longer to open, the spinning wheel appears constantly, and simple tasks feel sluggish. Before assuming you need a new computer or expensive upgrades, try basic maintenance that actually works.

Macs slow down over time not because hardware fails, but because software accumulates. Files pile up, apps run in the background you forgot about, and startup processes multiply until your Mac is struggling under the weight of digital clutter.

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1. Free up storage space

A full hard drive is the primary cause of Mac slowdowns. When storage fills beyond 85-90% capacity, macOS struggles to manage files and runs noticeably slower.

macOS includes a built-in storage optimizer that automatically identifies what's consuming space and suggests actions to free it up. This does the heavy lifting without requiring manual file hunting.

Click the Apple logo in the top left corner and select "System Settings." Then go to General, Storage. The "Recommendations" section displays optimization options like "Store in iCloud" (moves older files to cloud storage) and "Optimize Storage" (removes watched movies and email attachments automatically).

Hover over the colored storage bar at the top to see exactly what's consuming space — Apps, Documents, System Data, Photos, and other categories. Each color represents a different file type, making it easy to identify the biggest storage hogs at a glance.

Click individual recommendations to enable them. These settings work continuously in the background, automatically managing storage without you manually hunting through folders deciding what to delete.

2. Check Activity Monitor for resource hogs

Activity Monitor shows which apps consume CPU power, memory, and energy in real time. A single misbehaving app can slow your entire Mac.

Open Finder, go to Applications, Utilities, and Activity Monitor. Next, click the "CPU" tab and sort by "% CPU" to see which apps use the most processing power. Anything consistently above 80-100% is problematic.

To check RAM usage, click the "Memory" tab. The "Memory Pressure" graph at the bottom should stay green. If it's yellow or red, your Mac is running out of RAM and slowing down.

Quit apps using excessive resources that you're not actively using. Select the app in Activity Monitor and click the X button in the toolbar to force quit it.

You can also check the "Energy" tab to see which apps drain battery fastest. Reducing energy-intensive apps extends battery life and reduces heat.

3. Update macOS and apps if possible

Outdated software often runs slower than newer versions with performance optimizations and bug fixes. Updates frequently include speed improvements specifically designed to help older Macs run more smoothly.

Check for macOS updates by going to System Settings, General, and Software Update. If an update is available, install it. Major updates can take a while, so plan accordingly.

Update installed apps through the App Store. Open the App Store app and click "Updates" in the sidebar. Install all available updates, even apps you rarely use can slow your Mac if they're outdated and running background processes.

You could also enable automatic updates to handle this maintenance without remembering. In System Settings go to General, Software Update, click the info button next to "Automatic Updates" and turn on all options.


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Kaycee Hill
How-to Editor

Kaycee is Tom's Guide's How-To Editor, known for tutorials that get straight to what works. She writes across phones, homes, TVs and everything in between — because life doesn't stick to categories and neither should good advice. She's spent years in content creation doing one thing really well: making complicated things click. Kaycee is also an award-winning poet and co-editor at Fox and Star Books.

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