Installation steps
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Step 1
Download OpenCore Legacy Patcher
Get the app from the release page and open it on a supported base OS.
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Step 2
Create the macOS installer
Choose Create macOS Installer, download the target macOS installer, then write it to a USB drive. The entire USB drive will be formatted.
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Step 3
Build and install OpenCore
Select Build and Install OpenCore, build the hardware-specific configuration, then install OpenCore to the USB EFI or target drive.
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Step 4
Boot through EFI
Restart while holding Option, select EFI Boot with the OpenCore icon, then choose Install macOS in the OpenCore picker.
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Step 5
Finish macOS setup
Install macOS like a normal macOS installation. If setup loops after a reboot, hold Option again, select EFI Boot, and choose the macOS Installer or target disk entry.
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Step 6
Apply post-install volume patches
After booting the installed system, run OCLP and install root patches for graphics, WiFi, Bluetooth, camera, USB, Touch Bar, and other affected hardware.
Disk and erase warnings
If you use a brand-new disk, the boot guide says to choose View > Show All Devices in Disk Utility and format the entire disk to avoid a missing internal EFI later. For T1 Macs installing Sonoma or newer, do not erase the entire drive if you need to preserve T1 functionality; erase only the operating system volume.
USB creation and macOS installation can erase disks. Verify every selected disk before formatting.
Post-install root patching
Post-install volume patches restore support for hardware that newer macOS versions no longer support natively. Root patches can include graphics drivers, WiFi, Bluetooth, Touch Bar or T1 drivers, built-in camera drivers, USB 1.1 drivers, and other compatibility patches.
- Root patches are wiped by macOS updates and must be reinstalled after updates.
- Some Sequoia systems may require MetallibSupportPkg during root patching.
- AMD legacy GCN GPUs on Ventura or newer may require Apple's Kernel Debug Kit through KDKSupportPkg.