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M1 support for dual external monitors

Can my Macbook Air with M1 support two external monitors?

MacBook Air 13″, macOS 11.2

Posted on Feb 15, 2021 5:50 PM

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Posted on Feb 15, 2021 8:02 PM

Hello UCCFARM,


Not according to this article it can't, sorry.


Use external monitors with your Mac - Apple Support

"If you're using a Mac with Apple silicon, you can connect a single external display to your Mac using one of the Thunderbolt / USB 4 ports. Docks don't increase the number of displays you can connect as an extended desktop."

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Feb 15, 2021 8:02 PM in response to UCCFARM

Hello UCCFARM,


Not according to this article it can't, sorry.


Use external monitors with your Mac - Apple Support

"If you're using a Mac with Apple silicon, you can connect a single external display to your Mac using one of the Thunderbolt / USB 4 ports. Docks don't increase the number of displays you can connect as an extended desktop."

Mar 19, 2021 10:43 PM in response to marketanomaly

There is an 'M1 Apple Silicon' model which does support two displays.


Perhaps some later upgrade in hardware or firmware may allow others.

..The transition has just begun across Apple product hardware builds..


Mac mini (M1, 2020+) 

Model Identifier: Macmini9,1

Part Numbers: MGNR3xx/A, MGNT3xx/A

Tech Specs: Mac mini (M1, 2020)

User Guide: Mac mini (M1, 2020)


Apr 6, 2021 4:45 PM in response to UCCFARM

Like many, I did not fully appreciate my new MacBook Air M1 only supported a single external monitor, regardless of whether or not I splashed out on a new USB-C dock with dual HDMI interfaces.


Anyways, I did the next best thing:


  1. The first external monitor is driven using Apple's USB-C to HDMI adapter, or any of support.apple.com/en-ca/guide/macbook-air/apd8cdd74f57/mac, or your favourite USB-C dock with HDMI output.
  2. The 2nd external monitor is driven using 3rd-party DisplayLink drivers: https://www.displaylink.com/downloads/macos


You'll need a Displaylink-certified USB-to-HDMI adapter. I used a StarTech USB32HD4K USB to HDMI 4K adapter: https://www.startech.com/en-us/audio-video-products/usb32hd4k


I was pleased to find that the current v1.3, of the open source DisplayLink driver, supports my MacBook Air M1 in clamshell mode, and that I have no problem displaying internet videos on my DisplayLink-attached 1920x1080 external monitor. (My primary display, a 2560x1440 monitor, is supported using an Apple USB-C to HDMI adapter).


Yes, there remains the possibility using 3rd-party drivers like DisplayLink, that they will be broken by a future MacOS update, or that a DisplayLink-attached external monitor will perform less for some content (video editing?) but for now, all my needs are met, under MacOS 11.2.3: I have 2 external monitors, both working, on my MacBook Air M1.

Apr 28, 2021 9:15 AM in response to VelvetMc

To download the free DisplayLink Manager v1.3 for MacOS the URL is https://www.displaylink.com


The DisplayLink-certified USB3-to-HDMI adapter I'm using is: https://www.startech.com/en-ca/audio-video-products/usb32hd4k


The caveats are as mentioned:

  • compatibility might break with future MacOS versions. (I just updated to MacOS 11.3 w/o problem)
  • Performance might be unsuitable for some tasks (it mays YouTube videos skip-free for me, and I have my USB-C-to-HDMI-attached external monitor for more intensive tasks, should I encounter a task unsuitable )
  • Since my posting, I did try to play a copy-protected video and got this message: "This movie can be played only on displays that support HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection)" — but temporarily quitting the DisplayLink Manager allowed me to play that video on my USB-C-to-HDMI adaptor-attached external monitor #1, w/o issue.


PS. Unfortunately, I don't think there's a way to edit my previous posting to correct any problematic URLs.

Apr 19, 2021 1:42 AM in response to UCCFARM

M1 MacBooks natively support just one monitor, the M1 Mac Mini does natively support up to two external monitors - one via the HDMI port and a second via USB-C. But the latest models of the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro support only one external display.


But, I am using LG Split Screen software, you can split the monitor screen into multiple parts. I am using it that way with my Macbook pro M1 2020.


One more software ie. LG Dual Controller, I have installed so that I can switch between two pc and also copy-paste between them.


Dual Controller is a program that can be used to share a keyboard and mouse connected to one PC with another PC. It provides mutual compatibilities between PC and PC and allows users to share the keyboard and mouse.





I hope you can experiment this way to use multiple monitors with your MacBook Air M1.


I Hope, this will help you to solve your requirements.



Apr 19, 2021 12:55 AM in response to UCCFARM

No, but a larger monitor effectively does the same thing. I have a Pro M1 and my wife has an Air M1. We Both have Dell U2720Q monitors (27"). They connect with a single Thunderbolt cable for power and data. The screen is big enough to work on two things at once. The monitors also have plenty of other ports so it means you don't need a docking station or hub. Multi-tasking with a tidy desk - great.

Apr 27, 2021 3:09 AM in response to marketanomaly

marketanomaly wrote:

Not sure how this is defensible. A lot of people screwed themselves over here and rendered millions of dollars of hardware immediately useless for anyone who “bought a computer without bothering to read the specs”. It’s an epic screw up. They should acknowledge it and fix it ASAP by buying computers that actually meet their needs.

Fixed that for you.

M1 support for dual external monitors

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