Time Machine disk no longer encrypted and not working

My Time Machine has stopped working. It says the disk is no longer encrypted. I didn't change anything.


Can I safely recover what is on the disk, or do I have to delete and perform a full back up?


TIA

Steve

MacBook Pro 16″, macOS 26.1

Posted on Dec 11, 2025 2:38 AM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Dec 11, 2025 8:18 AM

What is the specific text of the warning? Did you recently upgrade to macOS 26 Tahoe? Doing so enables FileVault by default, and if you were previously backing up to an unencrypted Time Machine destination disk but your internal storage now has FileVault on, you may be seeing a warning about backing up an encrypted Mac to an unencrypted TM backup.


If that's the case, you can either turn FileVault back off (System Settings > Privacy & Security > FileVault) or erase and restart your TM backups as encrypted (use Disk Utility to erase the external drive and format it as GUID/APFS without encryption, then when setting up the new TM backup choose the option to encrypt it and select a password).


Personally, I'd choose the latter approach. My Mac has private data on it (financial data, tax returns, all the stuff identity thieves love) so using FileVault to protect the internal storage and having an encrypted backup are important to me.


Note that if your Mac can run Tahoe then it has either a T2 chip or Apple Silicon, meaning the internal storage is already encrypted. FileVault incorporates your login password into the cryptographic key. That's important because if someone gains physical access to your Mac and FileVault is off, they can reset your login password and access most of the data on your Mac (your keychains and logins/passkeys in the Passwords app are not accessible, nor are data stored in encrypted disk images, but everything else is an open book).

3 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Dec 11, 2025 8:18 AM in response to Flybr1dge

What is the specific text of the warning? Did you recently upgrade to macOS 26 Tahoe? Doing so enables FileVault by default, and if you were previously backing up to an unencrypted Time Machine destination disk but your internal storage now has FileVault on, you may be seeing a warning about backing up an encrypted Mac to an unencrypted TM backup.


If that's the case, you can either turn FileVault back off (System Settings > Privacy & Security > FileVault) or erase and restart your TM backups as encrypted (use Disk Utility to erase the external drive and format it as GUID/APFS without encryption, then when setting up the new TM backup choose the option to encrypt it and select a password).


Personally, I'd choose the latter approach. My Mac has private data on it (financial data, tax returns, all the stuff identity thieves love) so using FileVault to protect the internal storage and having an encrypted backup are important to me.


Note that if your Mac can run Tahoe then it has either a T2 chip or Apple Silicon, meaning the internal storage is already encrypted. FileVault incorporates your login password into the cryptographic key. That's important because if someone gains physical access to your Mac and FileVault is off, they can reset your login password and access most of the data on your Mac (your keychains and logins/passkeys in the Passwords app are not accessible, nor are data stored in encrypted disk images, but everything else is an open book).

Time Machine disk no longer encrypted and not working

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