my macbook air M1 will not stay turned off

when I shut down my MacBook Air M1, it goes off to the black screen but then immediately turns itself back on, how do I stop this from happening?

MacBook Air (M1, 2020)

Posted on Sep 27, 2025 8:42 AM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Sep 27, 2025 7:13 PM

In addition to @SergZak's excellent advice, you also not connect or disconnect anything from the laptop after putting it to sleep or powering it off (including the power adapter) as that could also trigger the laptop to power back on again.


Disconnect all external devices prior to shutting down the Mac just in case one of those external devices is causing a problem.


If none of these things are the reason, then most likely your laptop has a hardware issue of some sort that will need to be repaired.


You can try a DFU Firmware Revive which resets the secure enclave chip & system firmware....I doubt this will help, but it doesn't hurt to try. This should not affect any data on the internal SSD, but if the process fails, then who knows. Unfortunately this process requires access to another Mac running macOS 26 Tahoe (or possibly macOS 15.x Sequoia).


Make sure to have a good backup now while you still can do so. Of course you should always have frequent & regular backups. There are a lot of new ways to lose access to the data stored on the internal SSD of the recent Macs due to all of the hardware, software, and security changes.

2 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Sep 27, 2025 7:13 PM in response to garylaw1966

In addition to @SergZak's excellent advice, you also not connect or disconnect anything from the laptop after putting it to sleep or powering it off (including the power adapter) as that could also trigger the laptop to power back on again.


Disconnect all external devices prior to shutting down the Mac just in case one of those external devices is causing a problem.


If none of these things are the reason, then most likely your laptop has a hardware issue of some sort that will need to be repaired.


You can try a DFU Firmware Revive which resets the secure enclave chip & system firmware....I doubt this will help, but it doesn't hurt to try. This should not affect any data on the internal SSD, but if the process fails, then who knows. Unfortunately this process requires access to another Mac running macOS 26 Tahoe (or possibly macOS 15.x Sequoia).


Make sure to have a good backup now while you still can do so. Of course you should always have frequent & regular backups. There are a lot of new ways to lose access to the data stored on the internal SSD of the recent Macs due to all of the hardware, software, and security changes.

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my macbook air M1 will not stay turned off

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