⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5) – Loses one star only due to lack of recent updates, but still reliable on modern macOS.
Do you use EFI Mounter, or do you prefer another method? Share your go-to EFI mounting trick in the comments below! Efi Mounter 3.1
macOS hides the EFI System Partition (ESP) by default to prevent accidental damage. But when you need to update your bootloader (OpenCore or Clover), swap a kext, or debug a boot issue, you need to see that partition. ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5) – Loses one star only due
If you’ve ever built a Hackintosh (running macOS on non-Apple hardware) or tinkered with dual-booting macOS and Windows, you know one thing for sure: accessing the EFI partition is a pain. macOS hides the EFI System Partition (ESP) by
Enter – a tiny, free utility that makes mounting the EFI drive as simple as a single click. What Exactly is EFI Mounter 3.1? EFI Mounter 3.1 is a lightweight macOS application (under 1 MB) that scans your system for all available EFI partitions, lists them clearly, and mounts the one you choose—often to /Volumes/EFI . It is particularly popular in the Hackintosh community because it works reliably across macOS versions (from High Sierra to Ventura and even Sonoma).