⤠How to Force Restart a MacBook Air 2018 or 2019
Wondering how to force restart a new MacBook Air 2019 or 2018 model? As you may have noticed there is no obvious power button like there used to be on old Macs, so the old approach to force restarting a Mac seems like it doesnât apply to the newer MacBook Air 2019 and 2018 models.
Not to worry though, if you have a frozen MacBook Air and need to hard restart the machine you will find that force rebooting the new models of MacBook Air is really quite simple.
How to Force Restart MacBook Air (2019, 2018)
- Press and hold down the Touch ID button / power button until the MacBook Air screen turns black
- Wait a few seconds, then press and hold down the Touch ID / power button on the MacBook Air again until you see the  Apple logo on screen
- When you see the Apple logo on the screen you can let go of the Power button again, as this indicates the computer is booting up.
Thatâs all there is to it. Force restarting the new model MacBook Air is really quite simple.
The MacBook Air will boot up as usual.
Forcing a reboot of the Mac is really something you should only do if the MacBook Air is frozen, and not as a regular method of shutting down or restarting a Mac.
A similar approach can be used to force reboot other frozen Macs too, particularly on any machine where the old Control + Command + Power button keyboard shortcut doesnât initiate a forced reboot.
Sometimes youâll hear forced rebooting and forced restarting referred to as a âhard rebootâ or âhard restartâ which are synonymous, and sometimes youâll erroneously hear it referred to as âhard resetâ but it should be clear this is not aiming to reset anything, it just forcibly turns the MacBook Air off and back on again to restart it.
You really shouldnât need to do this often (if ever at all), only when something is totally frozen and unresponsive on the MacBook Air.
If youâre initiating forced restarts for troubleshooting purposes, you may also want to know how to reset SMC on MacBook Air with Touch ID power buttons which is different from prior models, though resetting PRAM remains the same.
Presumably this will carry forward for as long as the Touch ID button is also the Power button on MacBook Air models, so until that changes itâs reasonable to assume that MacBook Air from 2020 onward will have the same force restarting mechanism.






