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macOS 27 requires Apple Silicon, as Apple draws down the Intel Mac era
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macOS 27 requires Apple Silicon, as Apple draws down the Intel Mac era

Ars Technica · Jun 8, 2026, 9:03 PM · Also reported by 4 other sources

As Apple announced last year, this year's mac OS release will end support for Intel Macs. The mac OS 27 Golden Gate release will require a Mac with an Apple Silicon chip inside, including the original M1 that launched in the Mac Book Air, Mac Book Pro, and Mac mini back in late 2020. Intel Macs running mac OS 26 Tahoe can expect security and Safari patches for about two more years after the release of mac OS 27 Golden Gate. Macs running mac OS 15 Sequoia will receive one more year of updates. Apple Silicon Macs will still be able to run Intel Mac apps via the Rosetta 2 compatibility layer in macOS 27, but future releases will begin to limit the technology (Apple has said it will mainly be used to support older games that still use Intel code). This change has been a long time coming, and every new macOS release has left a longer and longer list of Intel Macs behind. But many Mac owners who purchased late-model Intel machines in 2019 and 2020 could still run the latest version of the operating system, and third-party utilities like the OpenCore Legacy Patcher helped more adventurous Mac owners use their unsupported hardware a bit longer.Read full article Comments

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