

An Idiot’s guide to creating strong passwords.Cleaning Your MacBook: Here are the Dos and Don’ts.Turn your Mac back on after doing this, and your Mac will boot into Recovery Mode, directly opening the password recovery tool.In this post, I’ll take you through the steps to change the password on your MacBook when you need to.

This will be text at the bottom of the screen, and it will tell you to hold down your power button in order to turn your Mac off.

If you use an Apple ID with your account, however, you will see a prompt after one minute. If you have FileVault disk encryption enabled and tied to an Apple ID, this all works a little differently: you won’t see a prompt like the one above, no matter how many times you get the password wrong. Reset The Password Using Apple ID or Recovery Key If those don’t work, you may be forced to reinstall macOS. If you do have FileVault enabled, you can try resetting your password using your Apple ID or your FileVault recovery key. What To Do If You Do Have FileVault Enabled You can’t remove that UEFI firmware password without visiting an Apple Store-at least in theory. This helps prevent thieves from just erasing the UEFI password of a MacBook after they steal it. Note: In the unlikely event that you’ve enabled a UEFI firmware password on your Mac, you won’t be able to gain access to macOS Recovery unless you remember that password. RELATED: How to Secure Your Computer With a BIOS or UEFI Password Wasn’t that easy? Almost too easy, which is why you should enable FileVault encryption if you haven’t already. Just head to System Preferences > Users & Groups, click the account for which you’d like to change the password, and then click the “Reset Password” button. And if the account is an administrator account, you can then change the password for your primary account. If you gave that other user account permission to decrypt your Mac with its password, you’ll be able to sign in and access a desktop. If you have more than one user account on your Mac, try signing in with a different user account.

First Things First: Try Signing In As Another User If none of that works, you’re files are gone, and you’ll simply have to reinstall macOS. If you have enabled FileVault, you’ve got two potential options: your Apple ID can work if you have one, or you can use the passcode you were shown after starting the encryption process. If you haven’t enabled FileVault disk encryption, there’s an easy password-reset tool you can access. RELATED: How to Encrypt Your Mac's System Drive, Removable Devices, and Individual Files Fail enough times and you’ll be able to reset your password with your Apple ID. Can’t remember your Mac’s password? Don’t worry. With the default settings, you can simply try logging into your Mac.
