How to use Time Machine to back up a Mac

Macworld

Imagine the worst. Losing irreplaceable photos because your Mac’s drive failed? Accidentally deleting your dissertation? You might think it will never happen to you, but all it takes is a glass of water falling onto your MacBook and you could lose everything.

But at least if you’ve got a backup, the financial outlay of getting a new Mac will be made less traumatic by the fact that you can recover everything from your old one. Luckily Apple makes backing up your Mac really easy, so there really is no excuse not to do it.

We have lots of general advice about the importance of backing up your Mac in a separate article, but in this article we’re going to focus on one method in particular: Time Machine. Other apps can back up a Mac: take a look at our recommendations of the best apps to back up a Mac, which include Disk Drill Pro (see our review) and SuperDuper! (see our review).

This tutorial covers everything you need to know about backing up your Mac using Apple’s Time Machine software, including: how to use Time Machine, what to do if Time Machine is too slow, what Time Machine does and doesn’t back up, whether Time Machine backs up when your Mac is asleep, what to do if your back up fails due to not enough space, and how to delete old backups. We’ll also cover how to back up multiple Macs using Time Machine.

If you want to know how to restore or recover a file from a Time Machine backup you’ve made previously, read this: How to restore files on Mac using Time Machine. We also explain How to manage multiple Time Machine backups on and off your Mac.

You may have some questions about whether you even need to be backing up your Mac if you are syncing your data using iCloud. Alternatively, you may be wondering if you can back your Mac up to iCloud or if you can back up iCloud to Time Machine, we discuss those valid questions elsewhere. See: Time Machine vs iCloud: Do you need to use both and can one back up to the other?

What does Time Machine do?

Time Machine is Apple’s software to back up your Mac, and it comes with every Mac. All you need is a separate storage device to back up to. We have a round-up of the best hard drives for Mac, and the best SSDs for Mac, and the best NAS drives for Mac, so you are spoiled for choice.

Time Machine keeps a copy of everything on your Mac. It makes hourly backups for the past 24 hours, daily backups for the past month, and weekly backups for each month. It also creates local snapshots on your Mac. One daily snapshot is saved every 24 hours, beginning from the time you start or restart your computer. One weekly snapshot is saved every week. These snapshots will only exist if you have set up Time Machine to back up to a separate drive, but they are on your Mac, rather than that drive.

This probably sounds like a lot of backing up but it isn’t. Time Machine only backs up the changes you have made since the last backup so each backup should be really quick.

That doesn’t mean that the new changes overwrite all the old changes. Time Machine stores multiple versions of everything you are working on. For example, you can see a document as it was when you were working on it last Wednesday, as well as the version from Thursday.

Essentially, if you were constantly working on a document you would have 24 copies of it from the past 24 hours, one copy of it for each day of the last month, and one copy a week from the months prior.

It is also really easy to locate the older versions of a file–which is handy if you have changed your mind about changes that were made a few days ago. When you look through your Time Machine back up everything is organized in exactly the same way as it was in the past.

So, for example, if you had a file on your Desktop before you accidentally deleted it last Thursday you can go to the Desktop folder as it was last Wednesday to recover the file. This is why Apple calls it Time Machine, because you are essentially going back in time to find the file.

The other benefit is that because Time Machine isn’t backing up your whole Mac every time, it shouldn’t take up a lot of space on your backup drive. But when you do get to that point the older backups will be deleted to make space for new ones.

All this backing up means that if you ever get a new Mac you can use your Time Machine backup to ‘recover’ your old Mac onto your new Mac. All your settings and all your files and folders will be just as you left them. We’ll cover how to recover your Mac using your Time Machine backup, and how to copy your Time Machine backup to a new Mac, below.

What you need for Time Machine

You’ll need a reasonably large external storage device. This could be a USB, Firewire or Thunderbolt hard drive or SSD that you plug into your Mac, or a NAS drive which your Mac connects to via a WiFi network. We’d advise getting a unit offering at least 1TB if you can afford it.

We recommend updating to the latest version of macOS, but Time Machine has long been available on Macs (since Mac OS X Leopard in 2007).

We have a collection of the best NAS drives, the best hard drives and the best SSDs, to help you find the best option for backing up to.

How to back up your Mac with Time Machine

Plug in your hard drive or SSD. You may see an alert on your Mac asking if you want to use the drive with Time Machine.

Open Time Machine if you didn’t see the alert referred to above. (Find the Time Machine app by pressing Command + Space bar and start typing Time Machine).

Click on Add Backup Disk.

The drive will appear, click on Set Up Disk.

If you want to encrypt the backup (for security) you can set that up. You will need to create a password, you can set up a password hint.

You can also set a Disk Usage Limit (which might help if you have a small disk or are sharing it with someone). 

Click Done. 

You will need to Erase the disk you are using for your backup. Click on Erase and wait while that happens.

Now just wait and the backup will start (you will see a countdown from 59 seconds).

If you don’t see the option to back up your Mac when you plug in the drive this may be because the drive isn’t formatted correctly. Time Machine used to require that the storage was formatted as Mac OS Extended (Journaled), but these days APFS or APFS Encrypted disks are more suitable. For help formatting your drive open Disk Utility and follow our How to format a drive guide.

How often should you back up a Mac?

You should back up your Mac regularly. The beauty of Time Machine is that it will back up constantly, but rather than make a complete backup of your Mac every time, the software only copies the things you are working on, so each backup is small and you will hardly notice it happening.

Most other backup methods involve a daily backup of your whole system. The benefit of Apple’s method is that you can load up a version of a document you were working on an hour ago, rather than undoing over and over again until you get back to that version.

The important thing is to remember that while Time Machine backs up regularly, it will only do so if your Mac is connected to the device you are backing up to. This could be an external storage device that needs to be plugged into your Mac, so don’t forget to plug it in! Speaking of which, your Mac also needs to be plugged in before it will back up to Time Machine, it won’t do so when running on battery power.

Alternatively, you could use a network attached storage device (a NAS drive) in which case, your Mac should only need to be connected to the same WiFi network to back up.

If your Mac hasn’t backed up using Time Machine for a while you will see alerts reminding you to back up. Don’t wait until a hundred days have passed since your last Time Machine backup and then spill water over your laptop (we say this from experience).

How to force a Time Machine backup

Time Machine will make hourly backups but you can force it to make a backup at any time, perhaps because you are about to shut down your Mac and you want to make sure that the Time Machine backup is up to date first.

The quickest way to do this is:

Click on the Time Machine icon in the menu bar at the top of the screen.

Choose Back Up Now.

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Alternatively:

Open System Settings (previously known as System Preferences).

Click on General.

Scroll down to Time Machine.

Click on Back Up Now.

How long will a Time Machine backup take?

Wondering how long the Time Machine backup will take? This can vary widely.

It’s likely that if you’ve only made a few changes since the last backup this one won’t take very long: just a few minutes.

If you haven’t backed up for a while, or if this is your first backup, it’s going to take some time. If it’s been a few months since you last backed up you will have to wait while Time Machine searches your Mac for changes before it can determine how long the backup will take, so if it’s been a while expect this to take a long time. Eventually, it will finish Calculating time remaining and you will see how long it will take.

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Eventually, our backup (which was six months overdue because we weren’t heading out own advice) showed that there were about 4 hours remaining.

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Is you don’t have the necessary time to leave your Mac switched on, or if the backup is causing your Mac to slow down while you are working on something important, you can choose to Skip This Backup, as we will explain in the next section. Alternatively, there are ways to speed the backup up, which we look at below.

How to stop a Time Machine backup

If you don’t have time to back up now–perhaps you need to shut down your Mac and rush home–you can stop Time Machine from backing up your Mac.

Click on the Time Machine icon in the menu at the top of the screen.

Click on Skip This Backup.

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How to stop Time Machine backing up automatically

If you want to stop Time Machine backing up your Mac you could just unplug the external storage you are using for Time Machine backups, but the problem with that is you could end up going for months without updating.

A better solution is to disable hourly backups if they become annoying. Instead of hourly backups, you can choose to back up every day or every week.

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Remember that the less regular the backups the longer it will take because the system won’t be making the incremental hourly backups so there will be more new content to copy.

How to speed up a Time Machine backup

The first time you back up using Time Machine, expect it to take some time. Time Machine copies nearly all of the data on your Mac. At least you can keep using your Mac while Time Machine works in the background to back up your data.

If you recently upgraded macOS that could also cause Time Machine to take longer to complete a backup.

It might also take a while to back up your Mac with Time Machine if your previous backup was interrupted, or if a lot of files have changed, perhaps because the backup device hasn’t been plugged in for some time.

In these cases you could exclude some items from the backup so there isn’t as much data to back up. Follow these steps:

Open Time Machine settings by clicking on the Time Machine icon in the menu at the top of the screen and clicking on Open Time Machine Settings, or go to System Settings > General > Time Machine.

Click on Options.

Below Exclude from Backups click on the +.

Go to your Home folder (if don’t automatically see it in the right-hand column in the Finder, press Command + Shift + H to open it).

If there are folders here you would happily leave out of the backup you can select them and click on Exclude.

In the above example we excluded Downloads from the Time Machine backup.

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There are other ways to speed up a backup. If you are backing up over a network to a server, or to a network-attached storage device (NAS), it might be faster if you move your Mac to the same room as your router, or connect the storage device to your Mac, or the Mac to your router via an Ethernet cable. This should speed up your network.

If you’re using virtualization software to run other operating systems on your Mac, there might be large disk images including data related to those other operating systems on your Mac. You might only have changed a few files on in other OS, but Time Machine could back up the whole disk image. For this reason, you might want to tell Time Machine to exclude these files when it backs up.

Another thing that can interfere with your backups is antivirus software. You might want to exclude your backup drive from the virus scan.

If things are still slow, make sure your software is up to date, restart your Mac, and, if you are backing up over a network, restart your router.

How to back up multiple Macs to the same Time Machine drive

If you have more than one Mac you don’t need more than one external drive for your backups. You can backup more than one Mac to your Time Machine drive. You’ll need an external drive big enough to accommodate all the backups though–it’s recommended that you add up the space currently used by all your Macs and multiply that by 1.2 for the absolute minimum you will need.

All you need to do is plug your Time Machine backup drive into the other Mac. That Mac will start recording its own backups to a separate folder on that drive.

If you don’t fancy plugging and unplugging the drive all the time you can back up over the network you could set up a network attached storage device, or you could use Personal File Sharing and connect both Macs via the network, just be aware that this might be slower than doing so via a wired connection.

Time Machine Troubleshooting

If you are having problems with Time Machine check below to see if we have the solution.

What to do if Time Machine can’t complete the backup

There are a few scenarios when Time Machine might fail to back up your Mac and when this happens the Time Machine icon in the menu bar will have an exclamation mark in the middle of it.

It could be because the external drive doesn’t have enough space; it might have become corrupted because you unplugged the drive without dismounting it first (this is why it’s important to make sure you always eject a drive properly before disconnecting it); or it could be that the drive isn’t formatted correctly.

To check if the problem is with the device you are backing up to, you could try the following:

If you back up to a server, hold down the Option/Alt key on your keyboard while clicking the Time Machine icon in the menu bar, then choose Verify Backups. If Time Machine finds an issue with your backup, it will display a message with details. Follow the onscreen instructions.

If you back up to an external drive, check that there isn’t a problem with the drive you are backing up to. First open Time Machine preferences and turn Time Machine off by deselecting Back Up Automatically, then open Disk Utility (press Command + Space bar and search for Disk Utility), select the backup device, and use First Aid to check the external backup drive.

If you find that the drive isn’t formatted properly use Disk Utility to reformat the disk. If you have to reformat you will lose what’s on the drive, so make a copy first or find another drive and use that.

What to do if Time Machine failed due to lack of space

If Time Machine is unable to complete the backup because there is insufficient space there are a few things you can do.

You could choose to exclude items from your backup. Follow these steps:

Click the Time Machine icon in your menu and choose Time Machine preferences (or open Time Machine from System Settings/System Preferences).

Click on Options.

Click on + and locate any files and folders you want to leave out of the backup. If you have iTunes Match, for example, you could choose not to back up your music library because it will already be backed up in Apple’s iCloud.

Alternatively, you could delete old backups from your storage device, although Time Machine should do this itself as time progresses. Open the storage drive in your Finder and locate the backup files in the Backups.backupdb folder. Find some of the older files and delete (you’ll also have to remove them from the trash).

We have a separate article on What to do when Time Machine backup is full here.

Backup Software, Mac, MacOS, Personal Software