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External hard drive not mounting in macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur

Updated on Monday, July 10, 2023

iBoysoft author Rivers Wong

Written by

Rivers Wong
Professional tech editor

Approved by

Jessica Shee

English

8 solutions to fix external hard drive not mounting in macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur

Summary: This article will show you 8 solutions to troubleshoot the external hard drive not mounting in macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur error and how to recover lost data from unmountable external hard drives with iBoysoft Mac Data Recovery.

External hard drive not mounting on Mac

Normally, when you plug in an external hard drive to Macs, you'll see it mounted on the desktop, in Finder and in Disk Utility. Then you can read, edit, copy and delete files on the mounted external hard drive. 

However, if you are unable to mount external hard drives or it reminds you with the "com.apple.DiskManagement.disenter error" message, you cannot access your important data on this drive at all. The worst thing is that you don't even have any data backup when your external hard drive is unmountable. 

But now you can ease your mind, in this page, you will see 8 feasible solutions that you can try to make the external hard drive mounted in macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur.

Table of Contents:

 

How to fix the external hard drive not mounting in macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur issue?

Solution 1: Check if the hard drive is properly plugged in.

Since the connection between your Mac and external hard drives relies on cables, loose connections could be the cause that your external hard drive is not recognized by your Mac computer.

If the unstable connection is the case, your external hard drive would not be mounted even with a slight disturbance. Sometimes the cable itself will become hot because of a faulty connection. Therefore, you need to make sure that the connection, i.e. the USB cable, is in good condition.

Solution 2: Check if the USB port/USB hub is unmatchable, damaged, or lacks power.

If your external hard drive or USB flash drive is not mounted on Mac, try plugging it into another USB port or a USB hub. That's because there're USB 3.0 and USB 2.0 ports and they have some differences: USB 3.0 has a higher external hard drive not mounting in macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur issue? transfer rates provide more power, more bandwidth, etc. than USB 2.0. As you can see, insufficient power supply or damaged USB ports could also lead to external hard drives not mounting in macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur.

To check this error, you can unplug the problematic external hard drive and plug a functional external hard drive into this USB port to see if it can be mounted normally.

Solution 3: Check if your Mac is set to show mounted drives on the desktop.

It's also possible that your Mac has already recognized the external hard drive but not showing up on the Mac desktop or Finder. Under such circumstances, you should go to Finder > Preferences > General and make sure the "External disks" option is ticked. Then you'll see the external hard drive mounted on the desktop.

Show external disk on the desktop

You can also set your Mac to show external hard drives in Finder. Go to Finder > Preferences > Sidebar and make sure the "External disks" option under "Locations" is ticked.

Show external hard drive in Finder

Solution 4: Check if the external hard drive is NTFS formatted.

NTFS (New Technology File System) is a proprietary file system developed by Microsoft. However, for some reason, macOS comes with read-only support for NTFS; its disabled-by-default write support for NTFS is unstable. Even though the NTFS formatted external hard drive can show up in Disk Utility, external hard drives might not be mounting as normal.

You can go to Disk Utility and check the file system of the external hard drive is NTFS or not, if this is the case, you can back up the files on the NTFS external hard drive and format it to Mac-supported file systems (APFS, HFS+ or HFS) or file systems supported by both Windows and Mac, like FAT32 and exFAT.

Nevertheless, the best phenomenon is that you can read and write NTFS both on Macs and on Windows without fuss. So, a good NTFS for Mac application will enable you to write NTFS external hard drives on macOS without reformatting.

Solution 5: Check if the external hard drive is mountable in Disk Utility.

You can check if your external hard drive is mounting in Disk Utility. If your external hard drive appears there but is not mounted, you can click the Mount icon then the external hard drive will be mounted in macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur.

However, if the external hard drive appears in Disk Utility but is unmountable or has no volumes of that external drive listed, you got both good news and bad news. The good news is that showing the external hard drive in Disk Utility means the drive has no hardware problem, while the bad news is that the file system of this drive probably is corrupted.

But don't worry, macOS has a built-in repair tool, called First Aid, to fix minor disk errors. You can try to fix the external hard drive not mounting issue with this useful program. Just go to Utilities > Disk Utility and click First Aid.

Solution 6: Fix the unmountable external hard drive with Terminal.

If your external hard drive can't be recognized by your Mac and First Aid failed to repair it, you can try to remount via Terminal by following the steps carefully below:

  1. Go to Applications > Utility > Terminal.
  2. Type in diskutil list. Look for the section labeled /dev/disk_ (external, physical), and remember the disk number. 
    Terminal
  3. Type in diskutil info disk_. Replace "_" with your external disk number. This is to check if your system recognizes this drive.
  4. Once confirmed, type in diskutil eject disk_ to eject the external drive.Eject drive in terminal
  5. Physically remove the external drive and then re-plug it. Hopefully, your external hard drive will be mounted in macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur.

Solution 7: Check if the external hard drive is corrupted.

If unfortunately, none of the above solutions worked, it's very likely that the files system of the external hard drive is corrupted or damaged too seriously to be recognized by macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur. It could be the result of file system broken, virus attacks, improper ejection, etc. And if you have no important files on this drive, you can directly assign a new file system for this external hard drive by reformatting.

• How to format external hard drives on Mac?

Erase external hard drive

Solution 8: Recover lost data and reformat the unmountable external hard drive.

But what if you have invaluable data that you don't want to lose on this inaccessible external hard drive? In this case, recovering data from this drive with professional data recovery software, such as iBoysoft Mac Data Recovery, would be your access to this unmountable external hard drive.

iBoysoft Data Recovery for Mac is able to recover lost data from not mounted external hard drives in macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur and earlier versions, recover lost data from corrupted external APFS drives, recover lost data from unreadable external hard drives, recover deleted/lost data from APFS drives, and recover lost data from formatted APFS files, etc.

Step 1: Download and install iBoysoft Data Recovery for Mac on Mac. For the first-time installation, you need to allow Full Disk Access on Mac and enable system extensions on Mac for the software if your Mac is running macOS 10.13 or later.

Step 2: Launch this program. Select the unmountable hard drive and click Search the Lost Data. The program will start scanning this drive for lost files.

Recover lost data from not mounting external drive in macOS Catalina Mojave

Step 3: After the scanning process finishes, you can click Preview to overview the found files and preview them.

Step 4: Choose what you want to get back and click Recover.

Step 5: Go through the recovered files and make sure your desired files are recovered from this external hard drive successfully. Do not save the recovery results to the same partition or drive that you scanned to avoid data loss.

If, unfortunately, your data is lost from an external hard drive in macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur, whether the disk was formatted accidentally or files were deleted mistakenly, you can recover lost data from an unmountable hard drive with iBoysoft Data Recovery for Mac. But compared with data recovery software, the best way to escape from data loss is to back up your files on a regular basis.

 

Read more about Mounting a disk

Mounting a hard disk makes it accessible by the computer. This is a software process that "activates" the disk, which makes the folders and files on the disk readable by the computer. If a hard drive is physically connected, but not mounted, the computer will not recognize it.

Even though most operating systems, such as macOS, will mount newly connected disks by default, you still can't avoid accidental problems in that the hard drive is connected through devices like cables, USB ports, etc. To fix the external hard drive not mounting issue, you need to exclude the errors one by one, and to avoid the external hard drive not mounting on macOS Ventura/Monterey/Big Sur, remember to safely unmount the external disk before ejection to avoid possible file data corruption.