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Track down a lost or stolen Mac, using Find my Mac

Find My Mac is the one feature that Mac owners hope they’ll need to use, as it’s designed to help you track down a lost or stolen Mac by displaying its current GPS coordinates on a map.

Find My Mac isn’t a new feature, but it’s one that’s often overlooked, as most Mac users don’t like to dwell on the thought of their computer being stolen. Even if your Mac is insured and you’re confident that you’ll be reimbursed the cost of the actual machine, the thought of a stranger rifling through your files, folders and browsing history is a worrying one!

If you’re going to stand the best possible chance of recovering a lost or stolen Mac, then you’ll need to enable Find My Mac before your computer goes missing.

In this article, I’m going to make sure you’re prepared for the worst case scenario, by showing you how to activate Find My Mac, and then how to use it to view your Mac’s exact GPS coordinates.

Setup Find My Mac

To activate Find My Mac:

If ‘Find My Mac’ is greyed out and marked with a ‘Location services is off’ label, then this means your Mac doesn’t have permission to access your location. To enable location services:


Track Your Mac

Hopefully, once you’ve enabled Find My Mac you’ll have no reason to think about it ever again. However, if your Mac does go missing, then you can use Find My Mac to see exactly where your Mac is – with one limitation. Find My Mac can only communicate with a Mac that’s switched on and connected to the Internet. If your Mac is currently unreachable, then instead of your Mac’s location, Find My Mac will display a ‘Notify me when found’ checkbox. Select this checkbox, and Find My Mac will notify you when it does locate your Mac, which will typically be the next time your Mac connects to the Internet.

Assuming that your Mac is currently switched on and connected to the World Wide Web, you can check its current whereabouts via iCloud:

In addition to revealing your Mac’s whereabouts, the Find My Mac page contains a few additional options:


My Mac is missing and I didn’t enable Find My Mac!

If you’ve arrived at this article because you’re searching for advice on how to recover a Mac that doesn’t have Find My Mac enabled, then the bad news is that there’s no way to enable this feature remotely. However, you can perform some damage limitation:


Selling your Mac?

If you’ve decided to sell your Mac or pass it onto a friend or family member, then ideally you should wipe your Mac and restore its factory settings.

If you aren’t wiping your Mac, then at the very least you should remove it from your Find My Mac list:

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