Verified for macOS Tahoe 26.2

How to Fix Finder High CPU Usage in macOS Tahoe 26.2

Is Finder consuming 100% CPU and making your Mac sluggish?

TL;DR fix

Follow Fix 1: The Automated "Optimization" Solution — full Terminal commands and step-by-step instructions below. Verified on macOS Tahoe 26.2.

Recommended Troubleshooting Tool

Before proceeding with manual fixes, we recommend using CleanMyMac X. Quickly identify high CPU apps and optimize system memory with one click.


The Symptom

Activity Monitor shows Finder at the top of the CPU list. You might see a "Not Responding" message when right-clicking files.

The Fix

  1. Relaunch Finder

Option+Right-click the Finder icon in the Dock and select Relaunch.

  1. Delete Finder Preferences

Corrupted settings files often cause loops. In Terminal:

rm ~/Library/Preferences/com.apple.finder.plist
killall Finder
  1. Clear QuickLook Cache

Finder often hangs while trying to generate a preview of a corrupted file.

qlmanage -r
qlmanage -r cache

Fix 3: The Automated "Optimization" Solution

When background processes are forcing Finder into a loop.

Finder often hangs because it's waiting for a response from a background helper (like a cloud sync service or a broken Spotlight index).

Recommended Tool: CleanMyMac X

- Maintenance Module: Includes "Speed Up Mail" and "Reindex Spotlight" tools. Since Finder relies heavily on the Spotlight index for metadata, repairing the index often fixes Finder hangs.

- Optimization: Use the "Heavy Consumers" tool to identify if a specific app extension is crashing the Finder process.


Pro Tip

Check your Desktop. If you have thousands of files on your Desktop, Finder spends excessive CPU cycles rendering icons. Move them into a folder.