Free — Xps 13 9370 Hackintosh
Disclaimer: Installing macOS on non-Apple hardware may violate Apple’s macOS software license agreement and can be technically complex and unstable. This report is informational only.
Yes. For the price of a used XPS 13 9370 ($400–500), you get a machine that performs better than a 2018 MacBook Air in multi-core tasks. The screen is brighter, the keyboard has more travel, and you get two Thunderbolt 3 ports (which are fully functional for eGPUs and displays in macOS).
The Only "Non-Free" Caveat:
Community Resources (100% Free):
Before we download anything, let's look at the stock Dell XPS 13 9370 specifications: xps 13 9370 hackintosh free
The Dell XPS 13 9370 is widely considered the "golden ticket" for Hackintosh enthusiasts who want a macOS laptop without paying the Apple Tax for a MacBook Pro. With its stunning 4K InfinityEdge display, Intel 8th-gen quad-core processors (Kaby Lake R), and surprisingly compatible hardware, this machine can run macOS almost perfectly.
But here is the catch: commercial EFI folders and "pre-built" Hackintosh tools often charge money or contain bloatware. This guide is 100% free. We will build a Vanilla OpenCore Hackintosh from scratch using only open-source tools. Add SSDTs (use SSDTTime to generate from your
By the end of this guide, you will have a dual-boot Windows/macOS machine with working Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Audio, Graphics Acceleration, and even iMessage.
| Feature | Status | Notes | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | CPU (i7-8550U / i5-8250U) | ✅ Full support | Native power management | | iGPU (Intel UHD 620) | ✅ Full support | QE/CI acceleration works | | Audio (ALC299) | ✅ Works | With AppleALC.kext | | WiFi/Bluetooth | ⚠️ Requires replacement | Killer 1435 (Intel) is awful. Swap for DW1560 or Intel AX200 (with itlwm). | | Trackpad | ✅ Works | I2C gesture support | | Touchscreen | ✅ Works | Basic multi-touch | | Thunderbolt 3 | ⚠️ Hotplug limited | Works for video/charging, not full PCIe hotplug | | Sleep | ✅ Works | Proper S3 sleep | Boot via USB, install macOS