macOS Won't Boot — What to Try Before Panicking
A Mac that won't start is scary — but in most cases your data is fine and the fix is simpler than you'd think.
When a Mac freezes mid-boot, the first instinct is dread. Take a breath. The vast majority of stuck-boot situations are recoverable, and your files are usually untouched.
Try a Safe Boot first. Shut down completely. On Apple Silicon, hold the power button until you see startup options, pick your disk, then hold Shift and click Continue in Safe Mode. On Intel, hold Shift right after pressing power. Safe Mode skips third-party login items and runs disk checks automatically.
If Safe Mode works, the issue is software. Reboot normally and remove any recently installed kernel extensions, antivirus tools, or driver helpers. These are responsible for an outsized share of boot failures I see in the field.
If Safe Mode fails, boot into Recovery — same key combo on Apple Silicon, Command-R on Intel. Run First Aid in Disk Utility against your Macintosh HD volume. If First Aid reports unrecoverable errors, stop. Don't reinstall yet. The drive may still be imageable, and reinstalling can overwrite recoverable data.
That's the moment to call a local technician. I bring data recovery tools to your home, image the drive before touching anything, and only then move on to repair. Lake of the Pines, Penn Valley, Nevada City — I cover the foothills.
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If reading this guide didn't fully solve it, I come to you. Grass Valley, Nevada City, and surrounding areas.