I just got a new Macbook Pro M4 Max. With the new computer I am unable to run my virtual machine or set up a new one. I get.. "The specified configuration file is invalid." On my M1 Air Parallels Desktop 18 has been running on Sequoia with no problem. Why is this?
Hello, As per the Parallels Desktop and macOS compatibility guidelines , Parallels Desktop 18 is not fully optimized or compatible with macOS Sequoia, which can cause stability and performance issues, including the inability to start your virtual machine. Parallels Desktop 20 has been developed to be fully optimised and compatible with host macOS Sequoia. To resolve these issues, we would recommend you upgrading to Parallels Desktop 20. Thank you.
I believe Parallels is doing this on purpose. The VM was clearly working under Sequoia with v18, only now with the new installation it won't run. They're probably blocking the software in order to make people go and upgrade
Hello, As per the Parallels Desktop and macOS compatibility guidelines , Parallels Desktop 18 is not fully optimized or compatible with macOS Sequoia, which can cause stability and performance issues, including the inability to start your virtual machine. Parallels Desktop 20 has been developed to be fully optimised and compatible with host macOS Sequoia. To resolve these issues, we would recommend you upgrading to Parallels Desktop 20. Thank you.
From personal experience I can confirm that Parallels 18 will run under Sequoia, but only if an older version of Mac OS was updated to Sequoia. Our team recently got new Macs and we had hoped to migrate our working instances of Parallels 18 (we chose the perpetual license version over the subscription). It took us a while to discover that Parallels has blocked this pathway so that we will have to buy a new licence for use on our newer Macs. Would be nice if they let us continue using the software we paid for, if we were willing to acknowledge and accept that performance might not be optimal. Unfortunately that's not how software companies keep the lights on anymore.
My last "perpetual license" was Parallels 15 and from what I have read it will not run on Sequoia or a few of the previous macOS versions. I switched to a subscription a few years back just not to have to go through this (primarily because I have one older Windows program (Lotus Approach) that I cannot get to run under Crossover but it will run and print properly under Parallels 20/Windows 11. Also Microsoft Links but that is something I can live without.) Not sure if Parallels does this "intentionally" but I am sure there are plenty of other programs (and a lot of older games) that will only run properly on older versions of macOS. Also, I have found out that since I have an Apple Silicon M3 iMac, I can't even go back to a version of macOS that will properly run Parallels 15 even if I wanted to.
I have done a bit more research, and I have a better understanding of why previous versions of Parallels don't support newer Mac hardware. Unlike the Intel era newer variants of the M-chip can see significant changes to how they process graphics, etc. A set of instructions that worked perfectly well for an M1 series chip may not work at all for the M4 variant. When you buy a perpetual/one-time-purchase licence Parallels states that it may not work in future, and from this perspective it makes perfect sense. However, if you stay with the same hardware your one-time-purchase licence should remain stable and useful for several years, as the software changes to the OS are less disruptive. That's why 18 should continue to work with an M1 series, although you might not have luck installing it directly onto Sequoia (but I haven't had a chance to test that...)