Signing into an Apple Account or iCloud in a macOS virtual machine

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Signing into an Apple Account (formerly Apple ID) or using iCloud services inside a macOS virtual machine depends on your Mac's processor and the macOS version running on both the host and the virtual machine.

On Apple silicon Macs

If your Mac uses Apple silicon, you can sign into your Apple Account inside a macOS virtual machine, but only under specific conditions:

This limitation comes from Apple's Virtualization framework, which Parallels Desktop uses to run macOS virtual machines on Apple silicon. Parallels Desktop cannot override this platform-level restriction.

On Intel-based Macs

If your Mac uses an Intel processor, this specific restriction does not apply in the same way, since Intel-based macOS virtual machines in Parallels Desktop do not rely on Apple's Virtualization framework. If you run into Apple Account or iCloud sign-in issues on an Intel-based macOS virtual machine, this is typically unrelated to the framework limitation above. Check Apple's current guidance for your specific macOS version, since Apple's requirements around Apple Account and iCloud on virtual machines can change between releases.

What to do

If you need Apple Account or iCloud access inside a macOS virtual machine:

For the most current details on which iCloud features are available inside a virtual machine, see Apple's support article Use iCloud on a virtual machine.

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