Site icon ChrisWrites.com

How to turn your Mac into a Wi-Fi hotspot

You may be familiar with using tethering to transform your iPhone into a Wi-Fi hotspot, but did you know that you can turn your Mac into a Wi-Fi hotspot?

On the surface, this may not seem as useful as sharing your iPhone’s cellular data, but there are some situations where you may want to share your Mac’s Wi-Fi with other devices.

Perhaps you’ve purchased an Internet package at a hotel, only to later realise that there’s a single ethernet port – how are you going to survive, when you have a Mac, iPhone and an iPad that all need to be online 24/7? Or, perhaps you’re having a party at your house and don’t particularly want to make your Wi-Fi password public knowledge.

In this article, I’ll show you how to transform your Mac into a portable Wi-Fi hotspot, so you can share its connection with any Wi-Fi enabled device.

Turn your Mac into a hotspot

Imagine you’ve booked a nice, relaxing lodge break for your entire family, confident that the place offers free, unlimited Wi-Fi. Imagine your disappointment when you arrive, only to discover that this “free, unlimited Internet” is actually a single ethernet socket.

Don’t panic: you can connect your Mac to this single ethernet port, and then turn it into a Wi-Fi hotspot that everyone in your family can enjoy:

You’ve now successfully turned your Mac into a Wi-Fi hotspot! If you take a look at your Mac’s menu bar, you should see that the regular Wi-Fi icon has been replaced by a little arrow icon, which indicates that you’re sharing your Wi-Fi connection.

Connect to your new Wi-Fi hotspot

You can now connect to this hotspot, in exactly the same way you’d connect to any Wi-Fi network. For example, if you wanted to connect your iPhone or iPad, you’d need to:

After a few moments, your iPhone or iPad should be online! Rinse and repeat for every device that you want to connect to this hotspot.

What if I can’t connect to ethernet?

Let’s return to our lodge scenario. Imagine you have every intention of connecting your Mac to the ethernet socket and using it as a personal hotspot – then you realise that you forgot to pack your ethernet cable!

The bad news, is that by default your Mac can only connect to a Wi-Fi network or host its own network, so you cannot connect to a Wi-Fi network and then rebroadcast this signal as a Wi-Fi network. One potential workaround, is to purchase a Wi-Fi network adapter which enables one network interface to receive a Wi-Fi connection and the other to rebroadcast it.

Alternatively, you can share a Wi-Fi connection with other devices over a Bluetooth Personal Area Network. The resulting connection will be slower than sharing the ethernet connection over Wi-Fi, but it doesn’t require you to purchase any specialist adapters.

To share a Wi-Fi connection over Bluetooth:

Connect to a hotspot over Bluetooth

To connect to a Wi-Fi hotspot over Bluetooth, you’ll need to enable the Personal Hotspot feature. Let’s assume you’re connecting your iPad or iPhone, to your Mac:

Next, you need to pair the two devices:

Once you’ve successfully paired both devices, you’re ready to connect to your hotspot:

Exit mobile version