Yes, High Sierra on Older Macs Really Does Boost Performance

Mac mini

Foks have been saying that installing macOS High Sierra on older Macs provides better performance, so I decided to test that theory. While my daily driver is Valtur, the TMO Hackintosh, I also have a mid–2010 Mac mini. From my testing, I can confirm that High Sierra provides a modest improvement in performance. Let’s look at how I compared Sierra with High Sierra.

high sierra on older macs
The mid-2010 Mac mini isn’t the pinnacle of computer performance, but it still fares better with High Sierra than the operating system’s predecessor

Testing High Sierra on Older Macs

Gandalf, my mid–2010 Mac mini, has an Intel Core 2 Duo P8600 processor and 8GB of RAM. The drive is a 256GB OWC SSD. I performed a clean install of macOS Sierra. I didn’t install any additional software, except for Geekbench 4 in Tryout mode.

After obtaining the Geekbench 4 results for Sierra, I downloaded and performed a clean install of macOS High Sierra. Then I downloaded Geekbench again, after the initial time of Spotlight indexing was finished, and ran another series of tests. Now for the scores – if you’re into geekspeak, keep reading the results. If you aren’t quite so interested in exact numbers, feel free to skip ahead to “Interpreting the Benchmarks.”

The Benchmark Results

As you’ll see in the charts below, macOS High Sierra performed modestly better in all categories. Regardless of whether the test was single-core or multi-core, High Sierra provided consistently better performance in the analysis.

High Sierra on older Macs
Single-core performance of Sierra versus High Sierra shows some improvement with the newer operating system

Under macOS Sierra, the single- and multi-core scores were 1063 and 1671 respectively. Using both cores, the Mac mini processed speech recognition tasks at 14.5 words per second, for a 1691 score. Face detection occurred at 770.3 Ksubwindows per second, leading to a score of 2637. Memory bandwidth was 3.41GB/second, getting a score of 639 according to Geekbench 4’s test parameters.

High Sierra on older Macs
Multi-core performance, too, improves in High Sierra compared to Sierra

By way of contrast, the single-core overall score for High Sierra on Gandalf was 1169. In multi-core performance, the Mac mini scored 1909, a 238 point difference. Speech recognition got a score of 2147, processing 18.4 words per second. Face detection scored 2682, a 45 point boost. The memory bandwidth with multiple cores was boosted to 3.8GB/second, for a score of 3616.

Interpreting the Benchmarks

Whew, those were a lot of geeky numbers and phrases. To make a long story short, High Sierra provides a modest performance boost for Gandalf, my mid–2010 Mac mini. This doesn’t surprise me too terribly much, since I’ve found the tiny beast to consistently perform slightly better with new versions of OS X/macOS.

While not surprising, it’s welcome to see. I enjoy the fact that I can continue to use a seven-year-old Mac with the most modern operating system, and not have to worry about it bogging down and becoming inefficient. These results, I think, lend credence to the reports others have made about macOS High Sierra on older Macs giving them better levels of performance.

4 thoughts on “Yes, High Sierra on Older Macs Really Does Boost Performance

  • Thank you very much for your report.
    I am currently using a white unibody end-of-2009 Macbook, which I upgraded with 8GB ram and a 256GB SSD. I am at ease with 10.11 El Capitan and, actually, I don’t feel any urge to upgrade my HW.
    I am perfectly aware that my HW and its environment don’t allow me to exploit most of High Sierra’s new features, but sheer performance improvement could be a sufficient motivation for me to update from El Capitan straight to High Sierra.
    But, this is my doubt, is there any valuable improvement in performance when updating from 10.11 to 10.13?
    Are there any benchmarks around? Thank you, again.

  • FWIW, I partitioned my SSD so I could test Sierra as I continued to use El Capitan on a 2009 Mac Mini and on my 2011 Mac Mini. Once I was satisfied with Sierra, I updated El Capitan to Sierra and updated Sierra to test High Sierra.

    1. I can’t see it hurting. Perhaps do a clone of your Sierra install first, just to be on the safe side. I’ve never tested High Sierra booting from an external drive of any sort.

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