Difficulty
Moderate
Steps
6
Time Required
30 minutes - 1 day
Sections
1
- How to convert your Mac’s storage from HFS to APFS file system
- 6 steps
Flags
Member-Contributed Guide
An awesome member of our community made this guide. It is not managed by iFixit staff.
BackMac
Full Screen
Options
History
Save to Favorites
Download PDF
Edit
Translate
Get Shareable Link
Embed This Guide
Notify Me of Changes
Stop Notifications
Introduction
However, since the introduction of more advanced file systems APFS file systems became the default on newer models of Macs.
Supported on all versions of Mac OS X and macOSEncrypted volumes are accessible by any version of Mac OS X and macOSSupports Fusion drives
Concurrent access of the file system by a process is not allowed.No snapshotsNo support for dates beyond February 6, 2040Limited native file support for other file systemsTimestamps do not use the nanosecond standard.Checksums for data integrity is missing
Allows for clones or multiple copies of the same file, with only changes stored as deltas, which reduces storage space when making revisions or copying filesCan create point-in-time snapshotsFull-disk encryption with single or multi-key encryption for added securityUses checksums for data integrity of metadataMetadata corruption prevention due to creating new records instead of overwriting existing ones, which can become corrupt due to system crashesIncreases performance on some devices by eliminating the need to write changes twice compared to HFS+ Journaled file systemsMore efficient management of storage typically yields additional free space.
Checksums are only for metadata integrity–not user dataCompression is not available.Encrypted volumes can only be accessible by other computers running macOS High SierraDoes not support Fusion drivesCannot utilize NVRAM for data storage
While converting your drive shouldn’t affect your files, there are the incredibly rare exceptions that may occur that could endanger your files. Therefor, it is highly recommended that you create a backup of your drive to prevent data loss.
It is also worth noting that this process might take a while depending on the size of the drive. A drive that is only 256GB won’t take nearly as long as a drive that is 3TB large.
Step 1
Backup your data
- As a preventative measure, it is highly recommended you create an external backup drive to backup your files to
- Typically converting your file system should not effect your data, but there is always a risk of loosing data when messing with the internal drive.
As a preventative measure, it is highly recommended you create an external backup drive to backup your files to
Typically converting your file system should not effect your data, but there is always a risk of loosing data when messing with the internal drive.
1024
Step 2
Open Disk Utility and click on the View option
- Open the Disk Utility application and click the View option in the left hand corner.
- From the drop down menu, choose the Show All Devices option from the list.
Open the Disk Utility application and click the View option in the left hand corner.
From the drop down menu, choose the Show All Devices option from the list.
Step 3
Select the drive you want to convert
- You should see a list of all your containing drives within each of their respective volume. Select the drive you want to convert and click the Partition button from the buttons in the upper right hand side of the window.
You should see a list of all your containing drives within each of their respective volume. Select the drive you want to convert and click the Partition button from the buttons in the upper right hand side of the window.
Step 4
Make sure your "Scheme" is set to GUID Partition Map
- Make sure your Scheme is set to GUID Partition Map
- Depending on the drive you’re converting, your Scheme may be set to the “MS-DOS” format. In this case you would need to change the partition format.
Make sure your Scheme is set to GUID Partition Map
Depending on the drive you’re converting, your Scheme may be set to the “MS-DOS” format. In this case you would need to change the partition format.
Step 5
Set the format to Mac OS Extended Journaled
- Select Mac OS Extended (Journaled) from the “Format” dropdown menu.
- Make sure the settings are correct, and click the Apply button.
Select Mac OS Extended (Journaled) from the “Format” dropdown menu.
Make sure the settings are correct, and click the Apply button.
Step 6
Convert the partition to APFS
- Right click on the partition you set, and select Convert to APFS.
Right click on the partition you set, and select Convert to APFS.
Congratulations! You have successfully converted your drive to APFS. As stated previously, your files should have not been touched, always make sure everything is correct.
Cancel: I did not complete this guide.
One other person completed this guide.
Author
with 1 other contributor
Jacob Mehnert
Member since: 10/18/2021
12,621 Reputation
31 Guides authored
Badges:
42
+39 more badges
Team
iFanatics
Member of iFanatics
Community
49 Members
102 Guides authored