If you’re particularly savvy, you can transfer files from one Mac to another on the same network using file sharing instead of an external drive. SD cards and thumb drives use the same FAT32 format on both macOS and Windows, so if your files fit on those storage devices, that’s often easier than using a hard drive. Tip: If you are transferring files from a PC to a Mac, the external hard drive must be formatted as MS-DOS or NTFS, not APFS. The trick here (besides having enough storage capacity on your transfer drive) is to have your files and folders organized well enough so you get them all. You can connect an external hard drive, SD card, or thumb drive to your old computer, copy your files to it, then eject that device from the old computer, plug it into the new Mac, and copy the files to that new Mac. Direct file transfer via an external drive or file sharing There are several methods to transfer files locally from an old computer to a new Mac, and most work whether you’re moving from a Mac to a Mac or from a Windows PC to a Mac. This story includes methods for migrating files and apps two methods can transfer system settings as well. And you might want to transfer more than just files from your old computer to your new one.