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Mac Not Recognizing External Hard Drive? 10 Fixes

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External drive not showing on the desktop, missing from Finder, or disappearing after a few seconds? These fixes work for USB, Thunderbolt, and USB-C drives on all Macs running macOS Sequoia, Sonoma, and Ventura.

โšก Check Disk Utility First

Open Disk Utility (Applications โ†’ Utilities โ†’ Disk Utility). If the drive appears in the left sidebar (even greyed out) but not on the desktop โ€” it's detected but not mounted. Select it โ†’ click Mount. If it doesn't appear in Disk Utility at all, the issue is connection-level, not file system.

Connection & Hardware Checks

1Check Finder preferences for external drives

Finder โ†’ Settings (Cmd+comma) โ†’ General tab โ†’ make sure "External disks" is checked under "Show these items on the desktop." Also check Finder โ†’ Settings โ†’ Sidebar โ†’ verify "External disks" is checked there too. macOS sometimes unchecks these after updates โ€” the drive is mounted fine, it's just hidden from view. This resolves a surprising percentage of "drive disappeared" reports.

2Try a different cable and port

USB-C and USB cables are the most common failure point. Try a different cable first โ€” many USB-C cables are power-only and carry no data. Then try a different port on the Mac. If the drive works on one port but not another, you've isolated a port issue. If it works with a different cable, the original cable failed. Test the drive on another Mac if available to confirm it's not the drive itself.

3Check power requirements

Bus-powered drives (no separate power adapter) draw power from the USB port. MacBook USB-C ports provide 5W or 7.5W โ€” some 3.5" hard drives require more. If the drive spins up briefly then disconnects, it's not getting enough power. Try connecting directly to the Mac instead of through a hub, use a powered USB hub, or use the drive's power adapter if it has one. SSDs and 2.5" drives generally have no power issues; 3.5" drives almost always need external power.

4Use Disk Utility to mount or run First Aid

Open Disk Utility โ†’ View โ†’ Show All Devices. Look for your drive. If it appears but shows greyed out: click it โ†’ Mount button. If it shows but says "Not Mounted" with an error: click First Aid โ†’ Run. First Aid repairs minor file system corruption that prevents mounting. If First Aid finds errors it can't fix, the drive's file system is damaged โ€” data recovery may be needed before formatting.

Software & System Fixes

5Check drive format compatibility

Macs natively read: APFS, Mac OS Extended (HFS+), exFAT, FAT32. Macs can read but NOT write: NTFS (Windows format). If your drive is NTFS (common for drives previously used on Windows), it appears in Disk Utility but mounts read-only and may seem "broken." To write to NTFS drives on Mac, you need a third-party driver like Paragon NTFS or Microsoft's free NTFS for Mac. Disk Utility shows the format under the drive name.

6Reset the USB/Thunderbolt controller

Unplug the drive. Shut down the Mac completely. Wait 30 seconds. Plug in the drive, then start the Mac. On Apple Silicon, this is equivalent to an SMC reset and reinitializes the USB/Thunderbolt host controller. On Intel, you can also reset the SMC (Shift+Control+Option+Power for 10 seconds while off). Controllers occasionally get stuck in a state where they stop enumerating new devices.

7Check for drive in Terminal

Open Terminal and run:

diskutil list

This lists every disk the OS detects, including drives that aren't mounted and wouldn't appear in Disk Utility's default view. If your drive appears (e.g., /dev/disk3) but isn't mounted, run:

diskutil mount /dev/disk3

Replace disk3 with the actual identifier. If the drive doesn't appear in diskutil list at all, the OS isn't seeing it at the hardware level โ€” connection or hardware failure.

โš ๏ธ Drive clicking or making unusual sounds: A clicking, grinding, or repeated spinning-up sound from a hard drive is a critical warning sign of imminent mechanical failure. Do not run First Aid or attempt multiple reconnects โ€” this makes data loss more likely. Power it off immediately and consult a data recovery specialist. SSDs fail silently without noise; clicking is specific to mechanical hard drives.

Advanced Fixes

8Disable auto-sleep for external drives

macOS can spin down external drives after inactivity, and sometimes the drive doesn't wake properly. System Settings โ†’ Battery โ†’ Options โ†’ uncheck "Put hard disks to sleep when possible." Also check if "Low Power Mode" is on โ€” it aggressively spins down drives. For desktop Macs, check Energy Saver settings in System Settings.

9Update macOS and drive firmware

System Settings โ†’ General โ†’ Software Update. Also check the drive manufacturer's website for firmware updates โ€” particularly for Samsung, WD, and Seagate SSDs, which release macOS compatibility firmware regularly. Some drives need firmware updates to work correctly with Apple Silicon Macs. Run the manufacturer's drive utility app to check firmware version.

10Test on another computer and reformat if needed

Connect the drive to a Windows PC or another Mac. If it mounts there, the issue is Mac-specific (format or driver). If it doesn't mount anywhere, the drive has failed. If the drive contains no critical data and won't mount anywhere, reformatting is your last option: Disk Utility โ†’ select the drive โ†’ Erase โ†’ choose APFS or exFAT โ†’ Erase. This destroys all existing data but may recover a drive with a corrupted partition table.

โœ… Safely eject every time: The most common cause of external drive corruption (leading to mounting failures) is unplugging without ejecting. Always: right-click the drive in Finder โ†’ Eject, or drag to Trash while the drive is selected. Wait for the drive to disappear from Finder before unplugging. Skipping this even once can corrupt the file system's journal, requiring First Aid or a full reformat.

๐Ÿ”— Recommended External Drives

โ†’ Samsung T9 Portable SSD for Mac on Amazon โ†’ WD My Passport for Mac on Amazon โ†’ Powered USB Hubs for External Drives on Amazon

Drive clicking or data at risk?

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