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With macOS 26.1 released, is Tahoe ready for mainstream use?

  • Yes, things are running pretty smooth, upgrading should be fine.

    Votes: 20 37.0%
  • No, you'd be better off staying on Sequoia for a while longer.

    Votes: 34 63.0%

  • Total voters
    54
  • This poll will close: .

PotentPeas

macrumors 6502
Original poster
Jun 25, 2023
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I'd like to try this poll after each minor macOS upgrade is released (X.1, X.2). I'm curious how community sentiment changes over time, and it could also help other users gauge the community consensus on whether upgrading at this time is a "good idea" or not.

The poll will remain open for 30 days. I'll post another one when macOS 26.2 drops. If Apple follows their typical release pattern, the release window for macOS 26.2 is mid-December. (I will not post a poll for 26.1.1. If there is such a release, it will most likely include just a small number of targeted fixes and won't change the overall picture by much.)

———

As someone who values stability and "things working right" more than access to the latest new features, I'm holding off on upgrading to Tahoe until I believe that it will be a reasonably smooth experience.

With 26.0, reading comments and posts from the community, I saw a lot of repeatedly noted issues. For example: Dock randomly going to autohide. Network printers not working. UI elements not cleanly meshing. Not having certain icons prepared in the new style (i.e. external hard drive icon). Contacts app much less usable than before. Rounded corners on PDFs. Impossible to get "back" in the TV app in some cases. UI animations or video playback in various apps being stuttery, when that was not the case before the upgrade. Electron app performance issues. Large "hit box" for the green maximize button at the top of windows. Finder exhibiting unexpected behavior. And so on...

To me, it really seems like Apple pushed Tahoe out to hit a self-imposed deadline, and it was still somewhat "beta" quality at launch; they did not wait for it to be adequately polished.

I am interested in your take, after using macOS Tahoe 26.1 for a bit. Did they make any improvements that meaningfully fix or improve any issues you were experiencing with 26.0? Should a "regular" user upgrade yet? Is it "safe"? Or is it still not worth it, because of the bugs and UI jank?

Vote in the poll, and comment if you like!

Thanks.

(I'm putting in a request to have this topic pinned/sticky.)

———

For myself, in addition to "feeling out the community", I'm also waiting for updates to or compatibility confirmation for certain key apps that may be more sensitive breaking with an OS upgrade:
  • ✅ Parallels
  • ✅ CrossOver
  • ✅ BetterDisplay
  • ✅ TG Pro
  • ❌ Ice
    • (Ice currently has beta support only.)
 
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VMware Fusion here. I noticed I can now see how much memory each VM is using, this is an improvement over Sequioa and 26.0.1 (I used both during the last month).
I think I will stick with 26.1 this time, looks stable enough for me. Probably not yet perfect but good enough, and it looks the same for iOS 26.1

1762233002504.png
 
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If things are working right for you, and there’s no killer feature for you, then don’t upgrade. I’ve found it to be mostly fine but other than the fresh coat of ‘Liquid Glass’ paint, there’s not much to be excited over really.
 
Apart from the usual issues with such a poll I'd be interested to see the "No" split into "No but I haven't tried it myself" and "No and I'm already using it".
Noted, I think I can work with that.

And yeah, I get that this is a bit "unscientific" and will have some issues, but I thought it might be an interesting data point for some people who are wondering about this specific question (and I've seen a few threads about it pop up... hello @nathanz1lla).

The split is pretty close to 50/50 right now which is sort of what I expected, given the current discourse.
 
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I was waiting for 26.1 but I just learned that there are issues with Indesign version 20 which I still need for a client of mine. Until that's resolved, I'll be staying on Sequioa (Macbook Pro 14" M1 Pro).

Will keep my iPhone on iOS 18 for the moment as well ; it seems that iOS26.1 hasn't solved the battery drain issue yet (I have an iPhone 13 Pro).

I've updated my iPad to iOS26 (2022 iPad 10th Gen) but I must say that it's far from being as smooth as iOS18 was, even after turning off all effects and transparency. I just use it for some reading and watching youtube, so no harm done but if this was a work machine, I would not be happy...
 
90 days will run out in mid-December, so then 26.2 will probably be out.

There is no good way to vote here as there's no definitive answer to the question, because "mileages do vary". For me 26.1 UI responsiveness and speed is actually back to where it was when I got this M3 Air I am writing this on (which is a big change) - except when Orion is running with lots of tabs open and is not hidden - then UI animation, scrolling and video playback framerates will drop drastically (maybe even to less than 20 fps). In addition there are other apps that are horribly buggy and still straight out unusable on Tahoe and can contribute to negative experience. One can complain and then remember that "oh right I had this awful Bartender 6 running" or whatever...
 
Rogue Amoeba says it's time to upgrade:

Consider Upgrading to Tahoe Now​

upgrade.png


We advise a conservative approach when it comes to upgrading your Mac’s operating system, but with Apple’s 26.1 update, we’re confident in recommending Tahoe for our users. The fixes detailed above make Tahoe the best OS for most users.
 
A good idea for a poll for people wondering about technical issues.

Not really covered by the poll: if you're really hesitant about the system interface visuals by comparison to Sequoia, then 26.1 helps only a touch.
 
I just tried iOS 26.x for the first time (for months now, I've only seen it in photos and videos).

It looks pretty dumb.

In fact I'd say it's the dumbest looking Apple OS I've seen.

I've yet to see macOS 26.x IRL but from what I've seen on iOS 26.x I am glad I've stuck with macOS Sequoia. I have zero desire to switch, like, ever.

Been a Mac user since the 1990s with System 7.x.
 
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Hello,

Today, I have updated to macOS Tahoe and then cleaned reinstalled it since at the release of 26.1 and let me tell you. It's smoother than the release versions like macOS 26.0 and 26.0.1, but Sequoia I think I felt.... Not yet.

Some parts in Tahoe are more faster than Sequoia like the System Settings app when you scroll in Sequoia it might be jittery, and it is not how slow your mac's are, but the refresh rate. If you use a higher refresh rate than your screen it is speedy. But on Tahoe, I think they rewritten the sidebar and other parts in the app.

So Tahoe has some faster parts than Sequoia, while Sequoia has still its speed. So if you prefer consistency and stability I recommend that you should not update, but stay on Sequoia and wait for updates 'till .2 . Because during the Sequoia days I downgraded to Sonoma, because of how much resources does Sequoia use. But in macOS 15.2 in December I updated and it was fine, same on Sequoia.
 
I’ve consulted my go-to decision-maker, my Magic 8 Ball, several times. I’ve gotten back three “Outlook Not So Good” and two “My Reply is No” responses. Pretty overwhelmingly damning to move away from Sequoia, so it’s a “No” for me.
 
I just tried iOS 26.x for the first time (for months now, I've only seen it in photos and videos).

It looks pretty dumb.

A little off topic maybe, but I wanted to point out — I do feel like the "tinted" liquid glass option improves the experience in iOS 26.1. I was actually running iOS 26 since 26.0 beta 8. There were a number of times when the transparent liquid glass controls wouldn't be able to tell whether they should be "dark" or "light" and were hard to see over the background. The tinted option mostly alleviates that.

The same option was added to macOS 26.1 but it appears that the change it makes is very subtle by comparison. I hope that they continue to refine this. Liquid glass "looks cool" (to me) but it has some usability issues.
 
Working well on M1 Max with 64GB RAM, however on a pimped out 2019 Intel Mac Pro it's slower. A tip for Intel users, turn off Liquid Glass (reduce transparency in Accessability) and you should get better performance. I will turn this back on when it's stable, hopefully around .3 and .4.

It will definitely get better over time, it seems that there's some nasty memory leaks.

I don't recommend it in a production machine tbh, especially for Intel users. I would assume Apple will bring full performance by the end cycle of Tahoe, which is the last macOS update for Intel users.
 
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