If your MacBook feels laggy, hot, or slow for no clear reason, you’re not alone. Most of the time, it’s not hardware — it’s background clutter. I fixed mine in under 20 minutes using the steps below.
1. Find What’s Secretly Draining Your Mac
Start by identifying the real performance hogs.
- Open Activity Monitor (Spotlight → type Activity Monitor)
- Check:
- CPU tab → sort by % CPU
- Memory tab → sort by Memory
Close or uninstall apps that:
- Stay near the top all the time
- You rarely use but it keeps running in the background
This alone can calm the fans and instantly improve responsiveness.
2. Stop Apps From Launching Automatically
Too many login items slow everything down.
- Go to System Settings → General → Login Items
- Remove unnecessary apps from Open at Login
- Disable non-essential apps under Allow in the Background
Your Mac should boot lean, not load your entire app library.
3. Clean Your Desktop (Yes, It Matters)
Every desktop file uses system resources.
- Move loose files into folders
- Keep only a few folders on the desktop
- Avoid dozens of screenshots or downloads sitting there
A clean desktop makes Finder and macOS noticeably smoother.
4. Control Your Browser (Especially Chrome)
Browsers eat RAM fast.
- Keep tabs under 10–15
- Remove unused extensions
- Clear the cache occasionally if it’s bloated
Tip:
- Use Safari for daily browsing
- Use Chrome only when required
5. Free Up Disk Space Properly
macOS slows down when storage is nearly full.
- Go to System Settings → General → Storage
- Remove:
- Old iPhone backups
- Large unused apps
- Heavy videos or photo libraries (move to cloud/external)
Aim to keep 15–20% free storage.
6. Reduce Fancy Animations
Looks nice, cost-performance.
- Go to System Settings → Accessibility → Display
- Enable:
- Reduce Motion
- Reduce Transparency
Older Macs especially benefit from this.
7. Restart & Maintain Lightly
Macs need a reset, too.
- Restart once a week
- Once a month:
- Review login items
- Clean desktop
- Remove unused apps
No advanced tools needed — just good habits.
Final Thought
You don’t need a new Mac.
You just need to stop unnecessary things from running and give macOS room to breathe.
Leave a Reply