M1 MacBook Air’s TouchID scanner not working properly

Hi there,


Recently my M1 MacBook Air’s TouchID scanner has had delayed recognition of my print or it isn’t detecting my print at all. After doing some research online, I found that this problem is quite common in the new Apple Silicon Macs.


The recognition of my print fades in and out, and sometimes (like I said earlier) there’s no response at all. I can still physically press the button to shut down, restart or put it to sleep, but it’s just prints that it has difficulty with.


Should I wait for a software update that may fix the issue? I know for a fact that the Intel-based Macs had no problem reading prints all day long and should mean that the M1 has no problem doing the same.


Grey360

MacBook Air 13″, macOS 11.1

Posted on Jan 24, 2021 1:23 PM

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Posted on Jan 24, 2021 1:43 PM

This is a problem I know all too well, all the way back to my first Touch ID iPhone. The problem is more likely to be the condition of your finger, because the scanner is extremely sensitive to changes we can't see with our eyes. I work in a physical environment and I have found problems caused by abraded fingerprints, greasy or damp fingers, dry skin, cold fingers... you name it, it can mess up your finger scan. Even having wet hands for too long can make a temporary distortion which doesn't scan like the one you enrolled.


The workaround solution is to enrol more than one finger, and if possible pick a reserve finger on the other hand or one which doesn't get battered too much by your daily life. You can also remove the now-failing fingerprint and enrolled the same finger in its current condition, but expect that one to fail again as things change. The only negative point is that the TouchID setup screen doesn't flash a print to indicate a successful scan like the iPhone does, so if you have more than one print enrolled you don't know which one still works.

5 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jan 24, 2021 1:43 PM in response to Grey360

This is a problem I know all too well, all the way back to my first Touch ID iPhone. The problem is more likely to be the condition of your finger, because the scanner is extremely sensitive to changes we can't see with our eyes. I work in a physical environment and I have found problems caused by abraded fingerprints, greasy or damp fingers, dry skin, cold fingers... you name it, it can mess up your finger scan. Even having wet hands for too long can make a temporary distortion which doesn't scan like the one you enrolled.


The workaround solution is to enrol more than one finger, and if possible pick a reserve finger on the other hand or one which doesn't get battered too much by your daily life. You can also remove the now-failing fingerprint and enrolled the same finger in its current condition, but expect that one to fail again as things change. The only negative point is that the TouchID setup screen doesn't flash a print to indicate a successful scan like the iPhone does, so if you have more than one print enrolled you don't know which one still works.

Jan 25, 2021 4:38 PM in response to Grey360

There is no way to be sure, but there is a good general rule to discriminate between software, and hardware or other physical problems. If the problem is repeatable, reproducible with a defined series of steps it is likely to be software. If it is hardware it is more likely to be random or intermittent.


I don't see how software issues are likely to break finger recognition for a few users without everyone seeing the problem, and there is no general chorus if distress here. The system doesn't actually store the fingerprint as an image, it creates a mathematical hash which is then compared with a similar hash from future scans. Given that Apple has several years of successful implementation with iPhones and iPads it is more likely than not any significant bugs in the software would have been found by now. That seems to leave a hardware problem or physical changes to the finger ridges as the prime suspects. I tend to rule out hardware problems because when problems occur it still seems to work to enrol a new finger, which may become progressively less reliable over time.


Based on experience over several years since my iPhone 6s I am convinced the problems are due to short term changes or distortion of the target fingerprint. I have learned what tasks will wreck my fingerprint, and every time I do these things there is a pretty good correlation with having to key a passcode the hard way.


I got lucky with my new MacBook, it arrived just as I started a few easy weeks over Christmas and my fingers didn't get messed up. Work started again after New. Year, and sure enough I have been plagued with failures again. From experience I know if I got lucky and enrolled a "clean natural" fingerprint the scan will start working again as my fingerprint recovers. If I was unlucky and enrolled a damaged or distorted print it will become unreliable then fail as my finger recovers to its natural condition.

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M1 MacBook Air’s TouchID scanner not working properly

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