You can’t restore this backup because this Mac does not support booting from HFS

Trying to help my mom set up her new MacBook Pro from a Time Machine back up off her old MacBook. Her old computer is old enough that it could not be upgraded to Catalina, which is the version of MacOS that her new computer is on. When I had to move from El Capitan to Mojave myself, I found the migration assistant didn’t work correctly from my Time Machine backup being on an older os, and I ended up restoring from Time Machine backup, then upgrading. So I was helping her do the same and use the Restore From Time Machine backup option, then upgrade.


However, we got a message, “You can’t restore this backup because this Mac does not support booting from HFS.” Doing a little research, it seems that Time Machine drive should be HFS, and the new MacBooks are AFPS, so I don’t quite understand what’s wrong here and I’m wondering what we need to do to get t working in the future. Shouldn’t you be able to restore from a Time Machine backup?

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Posted on Jun 20, 2020 11:56 AM

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Jun 20, 2020 1:01 PM in response to gregherk

You don’t want to restore. Not here. Restoration restores the original macOS version. Your backup is from a macOS version that is too old to run on this new Mac. Which you know.


Migration Assistant works well in general, but corrupt sources can cause migration issues. With a corruption of the source storage—hardware issues and volume corruptions can cause issues with migrations, and add-on anti-malware and add-on cleaners have occasionally been known to cause corruptions—sometimes migrating from a source storage device directly works, sometimes not.


Jun 20, 2020 12:22 PM in response to gregherk

I suspect you’ve tried this:

Restore your Mac from a backup - Apple Support


And apparently also tried this:

How to move your content to a new Mac - Apple Support


But was that migration attempt after performing at least an update or maybe an upgrade on the source computer?

How to update the software on your Mac - Apple Support


Migration Assistant does work across a range of older macOS versions, so the question then becomes the age of the original Time Machine backup; which macOS version is running on the source Mac?


The other approach I’ve successfully used here—and which can be faster than migrating from a Time Machine backup—is copying the internal storage to external storage, then re-cabling the external storage over to the target system, and using that storage as the source for the migration.



Jun 20, 2020 12:02 PM in response to gregherk

gregherk wrote:

Trying to help my mom set up her new MacBook Pro from a Time Machine back up off her old MacBook. Her old computer is old enough that it could not be upgraded to Catalina, which is the version of MacOS that her new computer is on. When I had to move from El Capitan to Mojave myself, I found the migration assistant didn’t work correctly from my Time Machine backup being on an older os, and I ended up restoring from Time Machine backup, then upgrading. So I was helping her do the same and use the Restore From Time Machine backup option, then upgrade.

However, we got a message, “You can’t restore this backup because this Mac does not support booting from HFS.” Doing a little research, it seems that Time Machine drive should be HFS, and the new MacBooks are AFPS, so I don’t quite understand what’s wrong here and I’m wondering what we need to do to get t working in the future. Shouldn’t you be able to restore from a Time Machine backup?



Set up your new Mac - Apple Support


Jun 20, 2020 12:13 PM in response to leroydouglas

Thanks. We have used this guide, but as I mentioned the Migration Assistant previously did not work across OS versions, and this article does indicate that a Time Machine backup is an option, but this message prevents us from doing so. I’m looking for any insight to type to understand why the backup cannot be used or what needs to be done in order to use it.

Jun 20, 2020 12:30 PM in response to MrHoffman

Thanks -- yes, this message appears when following the exact steps on "Restore your Mac from a backup" under the "Restore both macOS and your files" option.


Currently, we are using the Migration Assistant and it's in progress. But I initially skipped that option because when I had to migrate from my old 2009 MacBook Pro (El Capitan) to an iMac last year (Mojave), Migration Assistant failed multiple times for me. It didn't actually move any files. Suspecting it was limited in its ability to migrate files/backup across OS versions, I opted to restore entirely from backup and then upgrade the OS on the new computer. That option worked well for me, and this is why I was trying it today. Her old MacBook Pro is on High Sierra and the new MacBook Pro is on Catalina; the backup itself was from yesterday. We had not done any updating or upgrading on the source computer since she cannot upgrade past High Sierra due to Apple's hardware requirements.


Hopefully the Migration Assistant now works better in Catalina and it transfers the files successfully. But I am still curious about this message and wonder if it may cause trouble down the line if we ever need to restore from backup onto her computer. I would like to understand it in more detail and what would need to be done to get the Restore from Time Machine backup option working.

Jun 20, 2020 12:19 PM in response to gregherk

If you are migrating there should be no "Restore" from Time Machine.


You have to tell us in detail exactly what you were doing.


There should be no reason not to be able to:

1) connect a Time Machine drive

2) start Migration Assistant

3) choose the drive to migrate from

4) elect to migrate the user account(s) from the drive


I recommend AGAINST migrating applications, settings and other files.

This way you can avoid bringing a lot of cruft, including stuff like old extensions which may not work in the newer OS.

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You can’t restore this backup because this Mac does not support booting from HFS

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