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Level 2
December 5, 2024
Question

what are the system requirements for turbotax 2024 to run on an apple silicon computer with macos sequoia?

  • December 5, 2024
  • 2 replies
  • 4 views
Is it possible that Intuit has failed to support the Apple Silicon chip that has been used for the past few years? I just purchased a new laptop and can't seem to run TurboTax Premier. Initial research indicates that there is a workaround using Rosetta 2 - can that possibly be accurate?

    2 replies

    Level 3
    January 1, 2025

    Rosetta would run TurboTax compiled for Intel CPU's more slowly in emulation mode on Apple Silicon CPU's.  TurboTax 2023 was built using Apple's Xcode development environment in which changing a setting would result in universal binary that would run natively at full speed on both Intel and Apple Silicon CPU's.  Those of us with Apple Silicon computers are paying a performance penalty even despite paying the full price for TurboTax.  The fact that Intuit hasn't built universal TurboTax binaries for the several years that this has been possible is inexcusable.

    Level 3
    March 2, 2025

    I can confirm that TurboTax 2024 still requires Rosetta when running on Apple Silicon Macs because Intuit refuses to offer TurboTax as a native Apple Silicon app.

    Level 2
    March 3, 2025

    See this help article for troubleshooting steps for Mac issues.

     

    See here for the current minimum system requirements.

     

    I have been running my Mac with Rosetta since last year with no issues.

     

    @Alohart 

     

    Level 4
    November 6, 2025

    TurboTax for 2025 has just been released. I installed it and it is still an Intel only binary. If Intuit does not continue on the macOS platform past when Apple discontinues Rosetta 2 (currently, Apple is saying Fall of 2027), I will be going to the Windows Version and will be using Parallels on the Mac to run Microsoft Windows. I will make sure I have access to the Windows download for 2024/2025/2026 and on. Parallels is an incredibly complex piece of software and they took 3 to 4 years of constant work before it was available after they had the Apple Silicon machine. The Apple Silicon binary has been available for 2 years now. In addition, they are working on a way to run Apple Intel Binaries, essentially a replacement for Rosetta 2 when it no longer works. (This doesn't mean they will actually have a product that does this, but they are currently working on it, according to customer service. That is, an earlier version of Intel macOS could run on a New Apple Silicon Mac as an app the way Windows can.)