With my system now working on OC 0.6.3, I created an OC Big Sur install USB, kicked off the install/upgrade, did the 3 or 4 reboots and that’s it. Successful Catalina/OC to Big Sur upgrade. So far everything but on-board Audio works, but that was also the case in Catalina. Select “Install on a specific disk” – Restore Big Sur. From here, change the install location of the app to your USB drive (mine is named “Big Sur” in the picture below). Select Pen drive volume from list of Volumes – Restore Big Sur. Press the enter/return key. The app will ask for your system password.
After months of waiting, macOS Big Sur was released in November 2020. No matter how great macOS Big Sur is, you can experience performance issues as you update your Mac. The good thing is you can downgrade to the previous macOS version.
Installation Guides Install MacOS Catalina / Big Sur / Monterey on Mobos Serie 300 / 400 / 500 with Intel 8th / 9th / 10th / 11th Gen Desktop Processors using OpenCore or Clover bootloader IPS Theme by IPSFocus.
There are two ways to revert from Big Sur to Catalina. The first one involves restoring a Time Machine backup. The second, which is a bit lengthy, explains how to downgrade to Catalina using a bootable installer. Whichever way you choose, we'll provide step-by-step instructions to help you downgrade.
Open this article on your phone to make sure you do everything step-by-step.
How to downgrade from macOS Big Sur using Time Machine
If you’ve backed up your Mac with Time Machine before upgrading to Big Sur, downgrading to Catalina will be easy. Here’s how to downgrade from macOS Big Sur to Catalina using Time Machine.
1. Back up your data
First, back up everything. Your Mac probably contains your personal data and documents that you don’t want to lose. So, to keep those alive after the downgrade, you need to back up your data.
You can use Google Drive, iCloud Drive, or any other cloud you prefer. After the backup is done, you can move on to the next step.
Before you begin reverting your Mac to macOS Catalina, it’s worth trying fixing performance issues on macOS Big Sur. Maybe you won’t need to downgrade at all.
CleanMyMac X can help identify and solve performance problems on your Mac. It’s a dedicated Mac cleaner that clears old junk and runs optimization tasks. It’s notarized by Apple, which means it’s safe for your Mac. Get CleanMyMac X for free to run a quick performance scan.2. Erase your Mac’s hard drive
The first step is plugging your Mac into power (the downgrade process may take a while, and you don’t want your Mac to power off unexpectedly).
You’ll need to erase your Mac’s drive. This will remove everything from your Mac, but you can restore your data later from a Time Machine backup.
- Restart your Mac (Apple menu > Restart).
- Hold Command-R when your Mac’s rebooting. The Utilities menu should appear.
- Choose Disk Utility.
- Click Continue and select Startup Disk (usually located at the top of the list ).
- Press Erase.
- Select the APFS file format.
- Choose GUID Partition Map and confirm.
Wait for the process to complete. Only after every piece of data is removed, can you clean install macOS Catalina.
3. Use Time Machine to restore your backup
You can now restore all your files and data and bring your Mac back to the condition it was in before you installed macOS Big Sur.
If your Time Machine backup is stored on the external drive, plug it in your Mac.
So, to restore your Time Machine Catalina backup:
- Restart your computer and hold Command-R when it reboots.
- Select the Restore From Time Machine Backup option on the Utilities window.
- Press Continue.
- Choose your Time Machine backup disk.
- Select the backup you want to restore from. Choose the most recent backup that occurred before you installed macOS Big Sur.
- Then, select a destination disk, where the contents of your backup will be stored.
- Click Restore and press Continue.
The process may take some time. Your Mac will restart running macOS Catalina.
How to downgrade from macOS Big Sur using a bootable installer
If you didn’t back up your Mac with the Time Machine, it’s too bad. But, you can still downgrade to the previous OS version. Just follow the instructions.
1. Back up your files and data
Backing up your data is important. It prevents you from losing all the files and data that have existed on your Mac's drive for a while. So, don’t forget to back up your Mac before you start downgrading to Catalina.
2. Create a bootable installer
A bootable installer will help you safely roll back to Catalina. Here’s how to create a bootable installer:
- You can go to the App Store and search for Catalina, then download it. Quit the installer, if it tries to install the OS.
- If your Mac already runs macOS Big Sur, download the macOS Catalina here.
- Get an external hard drive that has at least 12 GB of available storage and plug it in your Mac.
- Launch the Disk Utility app and erase your hard drive selecting Mac OS Extended format.
Now, it’s time to transfer your Catalina installer to your hard drive:
- Open Terminal (Applications > Utilities).
- Paste this command and press Enter:
sudo /Applications/Install macOS Catalina.app/Contents/Resources/createinstallmedia --volume /Volumes/MyVolume
The downloaded file, which is your bootable Catalina installer, should be in your Applications folder. MyVolume is the name of the hard drive; if your hard drive or flash drive has a different name, replace MyVolume with the name of your hard drive.
- If prompted, enter your administrator password and press Enter again. Terminal won’t show anything when you type your password.
- Follow the instructions that appear in the Terminal.
- When Terminal says “done”, your hard drive should have the same name as the installer you downloaded (for example, Install macOS Catalina).
Quit Terminal and eject the hard drive.
Install macOS Catalina
Now, you can roll back from macOS Big Sur using the bootable installer.
- Plug your hard drive (which is now your bootable installer) into your Mac.
- Open System Preferences > Startup Disk. Choose your bootable installer as a startup disk and press Restart.
- Your Mac should start up to macOS Recovery.
- Make sure your Mac has an internet connection to download firmware updates (you can use the Wi-Fi menu in the menu bar).
- In the Utilities window, select Install macOS.
- Click Continue and follow the on-screen instructions.
Your Mac will then start installing macOS Catalina and will restart when it’s done.
Mac runs slowly after the update?
If your Mac is slow after the update, but you don’t want to perform this lengthy process and revert to the previous OS, you could try a quick solution. CleanMyMac X has a helpful Maintenance feature that could fix all possible problems on your Mac.
- Open CleanMyMac X.
- Go to the Maintenance module.
- Press View All 9 Tasks.
- Check the boxes next to the maintenance tasks you want to run.
- Press Run.
Wait till CleanMyMac X runs the set of fixes to speed up your Mac.
Reverting to the previous macOS may seem like a terrifying task. But if you open this article on your phone or another device and follow the instructions, it will be much easier and faster. Don’t forget to clear your Mac before the backup – you will save a lot of free space and remove old clutter that slows down your machine.
After many months of fine-tuning, Apple finally released macOS 11.0 Big Sur in November 2020. The major features (like the new Safari) have been announced much earlier and fans, as well as haters, had their say. Still, many users ask themselves, whether macOS Big Sur is worth it. So, let’s take a look at macOS Big Sur and macOS Catalina to find out what improvements it brings.
Big Sur has more demanding system requirements than Catalina and you may also need to free up space on your Mac to install it. CleanMyMac X can help with both of those by running scripts to optimize your Mac’s performance and highlighting files you can safely remove, potentially freeing up several gigabytes of space.
Big Sur vs. Catalina: user interface
In Big Sur, Apple redesigned the interface for its built-in apps like Photos and Mail. They now have sidebars that stretch the full height of the window and toolbars with sleeker, simplified icons.
Finder windows now have more curved corners and plain white (or dark) backgrounds on title bars and toolbars.
The Dock has also been redesigned. The corners of the Dock are more rounded, and app icons are all the same shape, giving it a tidier look. Icons also have enhanced shading and shadows that make them appear less flat than in Catalina.
Control Center appears on the Mac for the first time in Big Sur, accessible from a menu bar item. Like on iOS, it allows you to control things like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and AirDrop and volume and display brightness. You can drag your favorite items to the menu bar.
The Notification Center in Big Sur now puts notifications and widgets in a single view and it groups notifications by app. Some notifications are interactive, so, for example, you can play a podcast episode directly from Notification Center.
Sheets, the alerts that dropdown from the top of windows to request you take action, now scale to the center of the window, are accompanied by the rest of the screen dimming, but also are less obtrusive than previously.
Symbols for things like Share or Undo are now more consistent, all taken from one library of symbols.
macOS Big Sur vs. macOS Catalina: Safari
Apple says that the update to Safari in Big Sur is the biggest ever. It boosts performance, reduces energy consumption, and adds features to improve privacy. Big Sur Safari also allows you to customize your homepage by adding a background image. Then you can add elements like your reading list, iCloud tabs, and even a Privacy Report.
Tabs have been re-designed to allow you to see more of them at once, and hovering over a tab brings up a preview of the page. Safari can also translate pages between seven languages with one click, tell you if any of your saved passwords have been compromised, and show a report of all the cross-site trackers it is blocking to protect your privacy.
macOS Catalina vs. Big Sur: Messages
Messages in Big Sur gets lots of new features, many of them similar to those that have been in other messaging apps for years, but better late than never. In Big Sur Messages, you can pin up to nine conversations to the top of the message list, reply directly to messages in group conversations and “mention” others, and add an image to identify a conversation.
Messages also allow you to search for and add GIFs and trending images, create and add Memoji on the Mac, and search messages more quickly. Early reports from Big Sur users suggest that searching in Big Sur is much faster than in Catalina and that Messages on the Mac is finally on a par with the iOS version, which is great news.
macOS Big Sur vs Catalina: Maps
Maps is another app that has lagged behind its iOS version. However, in Big Sur, that looks to have changed. Maps now allows you to create guides to locations, as well as access guides created by others.
It also has cycling routes, charging points for electric vehicles, and indoor maps for some locations. And then there’s Look Around, Apple’s version of Google Street View, also in Big Sur Maps. Look Around allows you to get a street-level 3D view of locations. Apple hasn’t yet said which areas will be covered, but it’s likely to be very limited initially.
Big Sur vs. Catalina: App Store
Privacy has been a key theme of the last couple of macOS releases, and Big Sur is no different. As well as the privacy report in Safari, Apple now displays privacy information in the App Store. For each app, types of data collected by the app are split into three categories: data used to track you, data linked to you, and data not linked to you. That makes it very easy to see at a glance how a specific app is using, say, your location data, or your financial information.
Big Sur vs. Catalina: More changes
There are lots of smaller improvements in Big Sur. Photos gets a refreshed interface, improved retouch tool that is driven by a machine-learning algorithm, new editing options, and better Memories with new soundtracks.
- The Music and Podcasts apps, which replaced iTunes in Catalina, have new For You recommendations and new layouts. Podcasts also gets a Listen Now feature and a more focused Up Next to make it easier to find the next episode of the podcasts you’re listening to. There’s a new section to help you find the latest episodes of podcasts you subscribe to, and there are hand-picked episode recommendations. The startup chime that disappeared from some Macs has been restored. And system sounds have been updated to make them easier on the ear. Apparently, this has been done using snippets of the original sounds. So the new sounds should be familiar, yet more pleasing to listen to.
- Spotlight has been beefed up in Big Sur and is now faster than ever. And it presents results in a more streamlined format to make them easier to browse. It also has Quick Look features that allow you to preview the whole of a document or web page by scrolling through it. It has the same markup tools that were added to the Finder in Catalina, allowing you to do things like rotating an image, cropping it, or signing a PDF, all within Spotlight. Spotlight also powers Find in Safari, Keynote, Pages, and other Apple apps.
- Siri can now answer questions you ask by searching the web then telling you what it has found.
- Voice memos, introduced in Catalina, gets the ability to organize recordings in folders and smart folders. It can also remove background noise automatically and room reverb with a click. And you can mark recordings as favorites.
- The weather widget in Notification Center gets some of the features Apple acquired when it bought Dark Sky. In the US, it will display a minute-by-minute chart showing the intensity of rain or snow over the coming hour. In the US, Europe, Japan, Canada, and Australia, it will display government alerts about severe weather. And all users will be able to see when the weather will be much warmer, colder, or wetter the next day.
How to improve your Mac’s performance with Big Sur
- Download CleanMyMac X if you haven’t done so already, and follow the instructions to install it.
- Launch it from your Applications folder.
- Choose the Optimization module and click View All Items.
- Review each category and check the boxes next to those you want to remove.
- Press Perform.
- If an item can’t be removed independently of its host app, click ‘Enabled’ next to its name to disable it.
Install Catalina On Big Sur Mac
There are many differences between the macOS Big Sur and Catalina. Some of the most obvious ones are the addition of Control Center, the change to Notifications, and the improvements in Safari. But there are many other changes too. Before you upgrade, it’s worth running CleanMyMac X to optimize the performance of your Mac and clear space.
macOS Big Sur vs. Catalina: The sumup
Install Catalina On Big Sur Free
Big Sur | Catalina |
Compatibility: | |
MacBook models from early 2015 or later MacBook Air models from 2013 or later MacBook Pro models from 2013 or later Mac mini models from 2014 or later iMac models from 2014 or later iMac Pro (all models) Mac Pro models from 2013 or later | 2012 and Early 2013 MacBook Pro 2012 MacBook Air 2012 and 2013 iMac 2012 Mac mini MacBook models from early 2015 or later MacBook Air models from 2013 or later MacBook Pro models from 2013 or later Mac mini models from 2014 or later iMac models from 2014 or later iMac Pro (all models) Mac Pro models from 2013 or later |
Control Center: | |
Yes | No |
Notification Center: | |
One tab | Two tabs |
Designed for: | |
Intel and ARM-powered Macs | Intel Macs |