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Wifi is incredibly slow on OS X El Capitan

So after installing OS X El Capitan my Wi-Fi is so so so so so slow.


My Internet Connection Speed is 2Mbps (240kb/sec) and it shows 2Mbps on my iPad and iPhone (using the speedtest.net app). On my MacBook Pro it shows me 120-250Kbps (10 to 25kb/sec) when I'm using Spotify, YouTube and anything that's Internet based (Apple Forums took me a minute to open)


I've never ever had this problem on Yosemite. My wifi works fine for sure. Even during downloading OS X El Capital from the App Store my speed was constant 230-240 Kb/sec but after installing El Capitan nothing works fine (Internet Based Applications)


I did everything I could. Deleted Wifi AP Name and added it back. Restarted everything (Router and Mac). Turned off Wifi and turned it back on.


I don't think its my wifi router or anything or else fault as my iPad and iPhone would have been affected as well.


Can someone please tell me if they face this issue as well and if yes what's the solution?

MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Late 2013), OS X El Capitan (10.11)

Posted on Oct 4, 2015 5:16 AM

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197 replies

Oct 12, 2015 9:29 AM in response to Wiz1331

Wiz1331 wrote:


Hey Luis,

Clean installed El cap onto a separate partition in hopes it would remedy the problem but unfortunately it led to the same result. To clarify the Wi-fi is not broken just working very badly. My home internet connection is pretty fast so it's not too bad there but if I'm on a slower network it is torturous.


Sorry to see it did not help, I was really hoping it would.

Oct 13, 2015 10:23 PM in response to grahammiranda

I also experienced this problem usually when I am far from the wifi router. The way I have come around it is by switching off the iPhone's wifi. It appears to be some type of wireless interference with the iPhone and Macbook wifi, both become extremely slow or stop working.

Not sure if this is a problem of El Capitan or iOS 9.0.2, but I have been experiencing these problems ever since I updated both OS.

Oct 14, 2015 3:23 AM in response to grahammiranda

Well, I think I sorted my WIFI issues!!


Just so you know how I have my Mac set up here.


I have 2 LG monitors connected to my MacBook Pro Retina mid 2012 via the 2 thunderbolt ports.

Mac is (usually) with closed lid and power connected. Always worked like this and never had a problem.


Now, after El Capitan, with the set up above, my WIFI was dead! The exclamation mark was showing on the top bar.


I decided to connect to the internet by plugging the ethernet cable straight instead of using WIFI, so I unplugged the 2 monitors, opened the lid and before connecting the ethernet cable I ran a speed test.


For my surprise, the internet was connected and running super fast as usual!


Ok, I thought the 2 thunderbolt monitors were somehow killing the WIFI. I connected 1 monitor only, closed the lid and ran the test. WIFI problems again. Plugged the 2nd monitor, ran test, still very very slow.


Kept the 2 monitors connected, opened the lid, ran the test and VOILA! WIFI is back again! Super fast and stable!


So I closed the lid again, ran the test, boom, internet speed dropped! I did this many times and experienced the same thing.


I can't believe that having the lid closed on my MBP is the real issue, but so far this is the best test I could do and see that somehow I managed to get my WIFI back by keeping the lid opened.


Again, I will keep testing this so please let me know how it goes your side. I will shoot a video tomorrow to show this happening.

Oct 14, 2015 6:29 AM in response to grahammiranda

Hi grahammiranda


I'm having problems with WIFI in Yosemite, sometimes it get slow suddendly and stays that way until I reboot on "safe mode", this is very easy but a bit slow.


I would encourage you to do this simple test:


1- first, run the speed test of Ookla: http://www.speedtest.net/es/

2-reboot while pressing "left shift" key until you see your user (then login it), your desktop (it will run very slow and with some graphical glitches)

3-once in your user just reboot again (normal)

4- run the Ookla test again


hope it helps

Oct 15, 2015 7:49 PM in response to jubamad

I was looking around for solutions after noticing my retina macbook pro late 2013 was only getting 80 Mbs download speeds on a/c while my ethernet connected mac mini was getting 340 mbs download. The wireless a/c at 5 ghz should be capable of higher than 80. I tried resetting the PRAM and on my first speed test using OOKLA shortly after restarting I got 340 MBS download on my wireless....then the test failed with a "socket error" and then subsequent tests have all been back to 80 mbs down/ 20 up. Resetting PRAM again didn't get me above 80. I guess I should count my blessings but from everything I've read my wireless should be capable of more than 80 (I live in an isolated area, no wireless congestion) when my ethernet is getting 340 down !


I was actually wondering if it's some function of the plugin for Ookla speediest or my Sophos that's running in background? Would appreciate any thoughts.

Oct 16, 2015 5:11 AM in response to grahammiranda

I'm having this issue as well. My 100mbps wifi connection at work now only gets around 1.2mbps after upgrading my 2012 Retina Macbook Pro to El Capitan. My desktop iMac still running Yosemite is still running at full speed so I know it's not the network.


I've tried resetting the PRAM, renewing the DHCP, and resetting just about everything else I've read about on this thread with no luck.


Interestingly, I have noticed that the problem doesn't exist when I am on wireless networks using Apple routers. My home connection has a first gen Time Capsule router & performance is normal.


Really hoping Apple takes this seriously and addresses it soon. I have to work remotely for the next few weeks.

Oct 16, 2015 11:35 AM in response to OctoberFour

There's clearly something wrong in the WiFi driver and/or the software that picks up the installed devices at boot time.


I am using an Apple Airport Express in my hotel room. The hotel wired connection yields ~84Mb/sec download and upload. The hotel WiFi was both unreliable and poorly performing for all of my devices (MacBook Pro Retina running El-Capitan, iPhone 6 Plus and iPad Air 2). I then shared my MacBook Pro wired connection via WiFi and got good performance on my iPhone and iPad. But I didn't want to be tethered to the wall, so I got the Airport Express. Now my iPhone and iPad get near the ethernet rate when using the Airport Express, i.e. ~70Mb/sec to 80Mb/sec. The Mac Book gets ~1Mb/sec!!! The stack above the driver (IP etc.) is the same for wired and wi-fi. I'm using the same application to test speed.


Now I noted an earlier comment with regards to monitor interaction... When I upgraded to El-Capitan, my monitor behavior when I connect my MacBook to my 2 monitors (Thunderbolt display and Samsung 4K display) is completely random, in terms of El-Capitan picking up the displays (sometimes it fails) and their resolution. The Thunderbolt display often ends up with the wrong resolution.


Is there something wrong with the way El-Capitan scans for devices and configures its drivers at boot time?...

Oct 18, 2015 3:55 PM in response to grahammiranda

- Wi-Fi takes a long time to connect after sleep or startup for known access points. This was never an issue with Mavericks.

- Sometimes will not connect at all. Have to cycle Wi-Fi off and on again.

- Wi-Fi will stop working, no data being received despite being connected to an access point. Have to cycle Wi-Fi off and on again. Happens randomly.

- Wi-Fi speeds are incredibly slow. Speed test on MacBook and iPhone 6s next to each other reveal vastly differing results. iPhone: 68Mbps. OSX: 24Mbps. (Did not run these tests at the same time).



I updated my computer and thought there was a bug with the update so I did a clean install, still experiencing the same issues on a fresh install.

Wifi is incredibly slow on OS X El Capitan

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