Mac Disasters: When the Flashing Question Mark Strikes — Mac Guru Lounge

Mac Disasters: When the Flashing Question Mark Strikes

by Matt on December 15, 2008

Whether you’re a first-time Mac user or a longtime advocate, few sights are scarier than the dreaded flashing question mark.

For those of you lucky enough never to have seen it, it appears immediately after you power on your computer. Instead of seeing the Apple logo (or in the old days, a smiling Mac), you’re simply presented with a flashing question mark, staring at you as though the computer forgot its singular purpose.

The ramifications can range from trifling to fatal for the computer. In this article, I will discuss what the flashing question mark means, how it can occur, and what you can do to fix it.

Understanding the Question (Mark)

When you see a flashing question mark, here is what your computer is saying to you: “I can’t find any operating systems to boot from. I don’t know what to do.”

Unfortunately, your Mac neither tells you this nor anything else that is remotely helpful, which means it is up to you to troubleshoot. Let’s look at how we can get to this point so we can understand which troubleshooting options are on the table.

What Causes the Flashing Question Mark?

Way back in the old days of Macs and PCs, there were no hard drives, which meant you had to keep your operating system on a floppy disk. The computer’s logic board was programmed to look for a floppy disk when powered on.

Today, people run computers with multiple internal and external hard drives, USB memory sticks, and DVD burners. Any of those disks could potentially hold an operating system that your computer can boot from, so in today’s world, the computer now has to ask, “Which disk do you want me to boot from?”

Because no one wants to have to tell the computer which disk every time the computer is turned on, the answer to “Which disk?” is stored in a little piece of the Mac’s memory called NVRAM (non-volatile random access memory).

When the Mac turns on, it first looks at the disk designated in NVRAM to see if there’s a valid operating system on it (a working version of Mac OS X). If it can’t find one, it will scan all the internal and external ports where you could have another disk, and if it finds a valid OS on one of those, it will boot from that disk.

If it can’t find anything to boot from, you get a flashing question mark.

So what can cause your computer to fail to find a good operating system? There are a number of possibilities. Here are the most common ones:

  • Corrupt NVRAM that needs to be reset.
  • A hard drive with a corrupt operating system or corrupt directory structure.
  • A hard drive with no operating system.
  • A hard drive that no longer functions.
  • A working hard drive that the computer can no longer see because of bad cables or boards inside the computer.

Troubleshooting the Problem

Now that we know what causes the flashing question mark, let’s try to fix the problem. I’m going to troubleshoot from the tip to the bottom of my list above, as this order goes from the least to the most difficult.

Corrupt NVRAM:

  • Hold down the option key and then turn on your computer while still holding it down. Soon, you should be presented with a blue screen.
  • Over the next 1-2 minutes, your computer will search for disks it can boot from and put each bootable disk into its own little “square.”
  • If you see the name of your hard drive (likely “Macintosh HD” unless you’ve changed it), click the icon and then the right arrow to boot from the drive. That should be all you need to do.
  • If the drive doesn’t show up or does but fails to load, continue on…

No operating system/corrupt operating system/corrupt directory structure:

  • At this point, we are going to need to boot either from the restore DVD (disc #1) that came with your computer, or (if you have upgraded the operating system separately) a Mac OS X install DVD. To boot from the disc, pop it into the DVD drive. While the computer should start booting from the disc shortly, you can also turn your computer off and back on while holding down the “c” key. This tells the computer to boot from the CD/DVD.
  • If you’ve never booted from this DVD before, you should know that it can take multiple minutes to start up. You’ll likely have to select which language you want to use before you get to the installer screen.
  • Once you get to the installer screen, you don’t want to install anything at this time. Instead, look up at the menu options, and one should be labeled, “Utilities.” Under Utilities, there is an option for “Disk Utility.” Choose Disk Utility, and that application should then open.
  • Here’s a picture of what you should see in Disk Utility:
  • We need to focus on a few things here. The first is what I have circled. This is the icon for my internal hard drive. Since most of you are trying to start up from your internal hard drive, it should be listed first and have the hard drive icon. You can see the icon below it is a CD, which represents my DVD burner (which would have the restore disc in it). If your left pane DOES NOT have a hard drive icon in it anywhere, you should skip down to the “Final Steps” section of this article.
  • Notice that my hard drive has a top line that says “465.8 GB WDC WD5000…” The second line says “Macintosh HD.” Obviously, the second line is what I named my hard drive (which happens to be the default name). The first line is the name of the full disk itself, which basically says it is a 465 GB drive, made by Western Digital Corp. (WDC) and is a model WD5000… .
  • Does any of this really matter? Well, if you have partitioned your hard drive (meaning it has more than one name — such as Macintosh HD and Boot Camp), you are concerned with the portion that has your operating system on it.
  • The safest thing to do is click on the top line of the hard drive.
  • Then click the “First Aid” tab (which is probably already selected).
  • Next, we want to do two things: run “Repair Disk Permissions” and then “Repair Disk” (#1 and #2).
  • These will check to see if files have bad permissions (which could cause the system to fail to boot), or if the directory structure of the disk is corrupt (which will prevent the computer from reading files on the disk).
  • You should be prepared for this to take a long time (more than 15 minutes for the file permissions and anywhere from 5-60 minutes for the repair of the disk). Feel free to read the status of the task as it is being spit out. Don’t worry so much about the files that have bad permissions: there are almost always a few on every disk. Once the file permissions have been repaired, click on the “Repair Disk” button.
  • Do mind the results of the repair disk. If there are problems, they will be highlighted in red. Disk Utility will try to repair the problems. If it does so successfully, it will actually tell you that the disk has been repaired successfully. If it cannot, it will tell you the disk cannot be repaired, again in red. If there are no problems, it will tell you the disk is OK in green.
  • What do we do now that Disk Utility is done with its repairs? If Disk Utility found no errors or was able to correct the errors, we’ll quit Disk Utility from its menu. This will take us back to the installer. If it could not fix the errors, skip down to “Final Steps.”
  • From the installer, again open the Utilities menu, and choose “Startup Disk.” Startup Disk will scan all the drives connected to your machine to see if it can start up from any of them. It will show you folders of the operating system from each disk it can start from. If it finds one, you can select it and choose to restart. Hopefully, your machine will boot back up, and you’ll be done.
  • If it finds no valid systems (or if it does but your computer still will not boot), you have a decision to make: your problem could be that your existing operating system is corrupt and needs to be reinstalled OR your hard drive format is corrupt and needs to be erased OR your hard drive is bad.
  • How do you resolve this? Well, we can reinstall the operating system. Quit Startup Disk and go back to the installer. From there, click Continue. Then, you will be presented with a screen that shows disks you can install onto. If you don’t see any, go down to “Final Steps.” If you see your hard drive, click it once.
  • After you click it, you could be presented with a green sign or a red sign. The green sign means the operating system is ready to be installed. If you see that, this means your computer really does not recognize a valid operating system on your disk. You can choose to install the operating system, and your computer may start up, but you may lose any or all of your data by installing. You might consider taking your computer to an Apple Store if you want more technical advice.
  • If you get a red sign, your computer will tell you why it can’t install the operating system. This may be because you have a newer operating system installed (like if you have 10.5.5 installed but your restore disc only has 10.5.0), or that you cannot install the operating system on your disk.
  • What to do? Well, with your hard drive still selected, choose the “Options” button in the lower left-hand corner of the box. Here, you’ll be presented with three options: upgrade, archive & install, erase & install. Upgrade will be grayed out, so this is not an option. Archive and install means that the computer will attempt to move your old operating system to a safe place on the hard drive, install a fresh operating system that works, and keep your data intact. It is still possible to lose data with this option. Finally, there is the erase and install, which means exactly that: erase everything and reinstall the operating system. If you erase your drive, you WILL lose all of your data.
  • Obviously, most people want to keep their data, so they’ll try the archive and install. If this doesn’t work, an erase and install may be necessary. You can try an archive first, and if that is unsuccessful, you can reboot from the DVD and do the erase and install. If neither is successful, go to “Final Steps.” I can’t emphasize enough that while these installs normally go smoothly, they can further damage the data on your drive (if there is more corruption than the installer and Disk Utility can see), so if you are apprehensive about pursuing this line of troubleshooting, you’re better off taking your machine to the Apple Store.

Final Steps

  • If Disk Utility recognized your hard drive but could not successfully fix it or reinstall the operating system, the best answer is that you should take your computer to the Apple Store. The more detailed answer is that it is still unclear whether the problem is software or hardware. For the most part, you can eliminate software as the culprit if you are willing to erase your hard drive and reinstall the operating system (as outlined above). If it still doesn’t work, the culprit could be your hard drive, its cable, your RAM, or your logic board.
  • If you’re not willing to erase your hard drive, you could purchase Alsoft’s DiskWarrior program. If this software cannot fix a corrupted disk, you probably will not find anything that can, and you will have to erase the hard drive (if software is the culprit).
  • If your hard drive is not recognized by the computer, chances are that the hard drive is dead and will need to be replaced. It could also be the hard drive cable, RAM, or logic board in your computer, but those are less common culprits. Again, since you likely need a repair, you can take your machine into the Apple Store.
  • There is one last piece of software you can run, and this can help determine if there is a problem with your hardware. The software is called the Apple Hardware Test, and it is located on the first restore disc that came with your computer (but not a retail Mac OS X install disc). To run this test:
  1. Put the restore disc #1 into your computer.
  2. Turn the computer on while holding down the “option” key on your keyboard to get that blue disk selector screen.
  3. Wait for all the disks to load, then select “Apple Hardware Test.”
  4. When the application loads, select “Extended Test” from the two button choices. The battery of tests will run. This could take anywhere from 15 minutes to 2 hours (nearly all of this time will be used to check your RAM).

IF the Apple Hardware Test gives you a hardware error message, this is proof-positive that there is a hardware problem. Write down the error message (listed in red) and take your machine to the Apple Store. If the test completes without any hardware error, this may mean that there is no hardware problem, but it may also mean the test simply cannot recognize the hardware problem. Thus, this test can only provide positive guarantees, not negative guarantees.

Final Word

You may be disappointed to read that many of the solutions presented here require you to take your computer into the Apple Store. The reason for this is that a flashing question mark, in the end, usually does indicate your computer has a hardware problem. Trying to repair the disk directory or reinstalling the operating system, unless you have more knowledge or resources, is generally the most an end-user can do to troubleshoot this problem.

My last piece of advice, and please do not think this is intended to pour salt into the wound, is that you need to have a backup strategy. Hard drives don’t go bad because you did something wrong. They go bad because mechanical parts eventually break. Please back up your data so you do not lose your most prized photos, music, and data.

Have you tried these steps before? Do you have advice on the flashing question mark? What are some other solutions? Let everyone know in the comments.

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{ 31 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Lady Selene February 14, 2009 at 3:34 pm

Hi, I read this article, last night I got the file with the flashing question mark, I downloaded firefox off the “Apple site” was reading all the features, then I was trying to set up the prefences, when my MacBook frooze up on me ! I have treated my MacBook like a baby, you have NO idea how I pamper, and take care of it. I am extreamly cautious about everything that has to do with the Mac. I am an IT person, so I know. I find it very hard to believe that all of a sudden there would be something wrong with the HD, I have almost nothing on it, I have downloaded next to nothign on it! The Apple Hardware Test showed I have no problem with the hard drive, yet, when I followed your directions, it was not found. I can’t tell you how terrible I feel right now, I am sitting here using a freaking PC…while my MacBook sits there helplessly. If there is any other suggestions you have for me to try PLEASE send them to me…Blessed Be ~Lin~

2 Travis March 12, 2009 at 6:52 am

Lady Selene,

You are an “IT person” so you know huh?

HA

You have a hard time believing an HDD failed because you have “downloaded next to nothing to it!”

You sound like a moron.

3 ~Lady Selene ~ March 12, 2009 at 3:55 pm

I meant I am an IT, and know enough to be cautious – I also DO KNOW it does not matter how much use your HD has – it can go at any time. I was simply making a statement in disbelief, I didn’t want it be the HD, thats all.
You sound like a wonderful person with a great personality!!! Are you always so judgmental of people you don’t know?
Have a good day

4 alyssa March 16, 2009 at 5:17 am

i dont get it?

5 Robert March 28, 2009 at 7:12 am

Lady Selene, google MacBook ErrNo 5 firefox and read fix posts

6 KBEBE September 2, 2009 at 5:43 pm

WHAT SHOULD YOU DO WHEN YOU HOLD DOWN THE OPTION KEY AND IT NO LONGER SHOWS YOU THE MACINTOSH HD OPTION JUST THE MAC OS X INSTALL DISC 1 OPTION???

7 MC September 7, 2009 at 7:56 am

First off, Travis – what did you add to this discussion?

Here’s what happened to me, maybe it can help someone. For the first time, I bought an external back-up drive, and copied my whole HD to it using Time Machine before upgrading to Snow Leopard. I then turned its power off, but kept it connected to my iMac with the FireWire 800 cable. The Mac would RESTART in like 30 seconds – no problems – but when I SHUT DOWN for the night, and tried to start up in the morning, I got the flashing question mark. This was on day 2. The first day it took like 10-15 minutes to start up, but eventually did. I knew the “?” meant the Mac couldn’t find a HD, and thought to disconnect the FireWire cable from the non-powered-up external drive. Again pressed the power-on button on the rear of the Mac, and bingo! – started right up from the internal HD. SO, I guess if your external drive is not powered on, remove its cable, or you’re confusing the Mac. Sorry if this seems elementary, but not everyone is a genius.

8 Kathy Rodgers November 15, 2009 at 1:09 pm

I have the flashing question mark, but have a DVD already in the computer so I can’t insert the restore disk. Any suggestions.

9 Matt November 15, 2009 at 1:38 pm

Turn the computer off. Then hold down the mouse/trackpad button and turn the computer back on (while still holding down the mouse/trackpad button). This tells your computer to eject the DVD. Once ejected, let go of the button and insert your install disc.

10 Elvira November 19, 2009 at 6:08 am

I loaded my mac os disc held down the C key at startup. And after about 3 minutes the mac ejected the disk and the question mark came back. HELP!! any ideas anyone

11 Michael January 18, 2010 at 6:36 am

I had this problem. When I took my iMac back to the Apple Store, it started up fine and recognized the hard drive again. The Genius told me it had something to do with the power management. Unfortunately I was so relieved at getting my hard drive back, I didn’t pay attention to the specifics of what he said was wrong.

However, he did say the reason it was fixed is because I unplugged the iMac from power for a few hours and that caused something to reset. Might have been the NVRam. Anyway, try unplugging your computer and removing the battery (if it’s a laptop), then hold the power button down for twenty to thirty seconds and see if that does the trick.

My problem currently is that it keeps doing this. Hangs on startup on the white apple screen for hours. When I hit the power button to shut it down, then restart, it give me the folder with question mark and I have to unplug it for a few hours. Happening daily, so I guess my problem is probably hardware.

12 Sly January 18, 2010 at 8:20 am

Painfully memories, what caused my was the harddrive got completely formated as a ntfs, which is what windows installers format the harddrive as.

13 Chok February 4, 2010 at 5:32 am

Matt the post has been really helpful thanks!

i got blinking folder with ? mark every time i boot. What interest me is that whenever i insert the disc1 that comes with the imac (although had an upgrade for snow leopard) then press “c” before the gray screen… it will boot normally. but slows down whenever i open applications, search the web, etc for 3 min i can do nothing on my mac.

i tried inserting the install disk snow leopard and tried the disk utility but my mackintosh HD did not appear.

now im trying to back up my files from my HD but i think this will take 4 days to finish. (using disk1 to boot my imac) then i’ll try to reformat the mackintosh HD and install agail snow leopard and hope to solve the problem.

can someone tell me what to do or don’t do? am i doing the right way?
thanks in advance

chok
imac 20inch os x snow leopard

14 JesusAli February 6, 2010 at 11:28 pm

Very complete post. I am bookmarking it to show to noobs.

The only thing I would add would be the process to boot the errant computer in Firewire Disk Mode while connected to a functioning computer and using Disk Utility on the functional Mac to attempt to repair the other.

This is what I’m going to try tomorrow morning on my friend’s wife’s Mac Mini.

15 Dan March 3, 2010 at 10:09 pm

Hi, I’ve had the infamous flashing question mark for about a month now. I have tried resetting the PRAM, repairing disk permissions, setting the start up disk back to normal, Diskwarrior 4 and even an optional re-installation that was suggested by a tech from Alsoft that re-installs OSX but saves your data. I’m ready to use an ancient technique called the ‘Iron Finger’ on this all-in-one paperweight.
Here’s how it started: I installed a downloaded upgrade to my Ableton6. Not long after I began having fun with Ableton8, the sound went crazy then finally everything on the screen simply froze. I held down the power button on the back to shut it down, restarted, and shazzam, that god-forsaken question mark. Now after all the suggested fixes from websites and emails, the mac will only work normally after its been unplugged for about 20min, then after using it for another 20min, it will freeze again. After a restart, the ? reveals itself again.
The strange thing is, I did lose data, but it was only the Ableton Projects saved in the Ableton folders, not the projects saved on the desktop. And Ableton8 wasn’t even installed anymore. My previous version of Ableton were still there, but they require my serial numbers that came with the purchase to unlock them which suggests something with my disk permissions is still screwed up.
I’m waiting on my external hard drive so I can just save anything I need to then do a complete re-install. But in the meantime, any ideas?

Thanks
Dan

16 Chilli April 17, 2010 at 7:31 pm

Hi, I have a very similar problem to Dan, on my 2008 iMac. Every so often, the computer starts acting sluggish, requiring a restart, and then instead of restarting normally it shows me the flashing question mark. Unplugging from the power source and waiting a long period of time (sometimes 24 hours) seems to be the only way it reboots normally. This problem started a few months ago, and after occuring regularly for a month or so it went back to normal, without any problems until this week. So it seems like the problem isn’t fatal. But it is severely annoying. What’s going on?

17 JesusAli April 17, 2010 at 9:12 pm

Chilli:

Intermittent issues are curious. Do you Shutdown your computer each night? Some people think Macs never need to be restarted, but they do benefit from it. Servers can stay up longer because they usually only turn on and run 1 program without ever opening and quitting other programs.

Have you run Disk Utility? That will show you if your hard drive is having problems. Regularly restarting your computer will help prevent hard drive problems.

Good luck.

18 ANA MARIA May 13, 2010 at 7:56 am

I fixed my computer with the first step. thank you!!!

19 Dan May 13, 2010 at 2:13 pm

Seems some of us on the all-in-one iMacs may have bought one from a bad batch of the production line. OSX is an awesome OS but apparently Apple used some crap hardware. I finally had to take my computer in to get it fixed by a local small business. They were able to get everything I wanted off the hard drive and onto an external that I bought recently and change the hard drive for a flat rate that was way cheaper than Apple. If all else fails with the dreaded flashing question mark, replace the hard drive. Of course all the problems start after the warranty is up. Lesson learned? BUY AN EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE & DISK WARRIOR! Backing up your data is awfully easy and cheap these days.

20 JesusAli May 14, 2010 at 12:32 am

Just a note I forgot to ever ad.

In some instances, when using the Apple Aluminum Keyboard, the Start Up Modifier Keys WILL NOT function correctly. This happened to me while trying to boot a 1st gen Mac Mini.

So if you’re trying to boot a Mac Mini with an Aluminum (silver) keyboard, and it doesn’t choose the DVD drive (C key) or provide Volume options (Option key) as described above, try with an OLDER MODEL USB KEYBOARD.

This was the only solution I could find. It seems certain that this affects some Mac Mini’s. I don’t know if it effects other models.

http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1924423&tstart=0

21 oxxy cheng July 26, 2010 at 7:26 am

thank you for posting this — was very helpful.
Much appreciated

22 Anne July 27, 2010 at 5:34 pm

You saved my Mac!!! I have no fingernails left, but my Mac has come back from the blinking question mark folder dead!!! I am an illustrator and have
Huge amounts of unbacked up art (soon to be rectified) on my Mac, and I thought I lost it all! It was stressful, but the best lesson I could have had how important it is to back up files!!!

23 free July 31, 2010 at 2:37 am

Purchasing a software appliance or affairs can be a big consideration, abnormally if purchasing avant-garde and usually big-ticket programs such as Microsoft Office or Adobe Photoshop. If because purchasing these programs it is important that you or your agents be accustomed with the affairs and are abiding it’s traveling to be able of what you charge it to do.

24 Zara February 20, 2011 at 10:46 am

I can’t thank you enough for the extremely helpful advice and for the very detailed explanation of the steps. It saved my computer!

25 Zara February 20, 2011 at 10:48 am

I can’t thank you enough for the extremely helpful advice and for the very detailed and easy-to-follow explanation. It saved my computer!

26 Julie May 16, 2011 at 4:34 pm

You are awesome! Whoever you are! Your advice was easy to follow and right to the point. Thanks for saving my ass!

27 LINDA June 2, 2011 at 7:59 pm

Wow, thanks, MATT. You just saved us lots of money with your clear directions. It’s a great thing when somebody like you shares his know how.

28 Anna June 11, 2011 at 8:50 pm

Very good article, but:

my CD drive doesn’t work either. It only lasted a couple of years. I am therefore rebooting / using disk utility from an external CD drive, but when almost through Disk Repair the drive spits the install disk out and the Mac gets stuck in “thinking mode”. When i try to reinsert the CD it is immediately spit out (from the external drive).

I am very disappointed about this problem. My MacBook is only about 4 years old. I use it a lot, but I treat it like a baby. I had a Toshiba before, and it lasted 8 years without fatal issues. The Mac’s CD drive broke down after less than 2 years (warranty 1 year), it has had a power issue and now it is apparently dead. That is NOT good enough quality.

I’ll be very happy if somebody has experienced a similar problem (insyall CD being ejected before repair finished) and knows what to do.

29 Barb June 25, 2011 at 1:11 pm

Anna, very same problem here, and this is the 2nd time I lost the hard drive!! At least this time I backed everything up two days before it died. That was because it was getting quirky and freezing, getting the big question mark several times on start up, so I had some warning. And it is SO expensive to have this thing replaced on IMACS! I love the operating system, but I’m going to go back to a PC after this one!

30 Andrea July 12, 2011 at 8:48 am

I’ve got the dreaded blinking question mark right now, probably as a result of my cat leaping over the computer and crashing into the USB card reader, smashing it to pieces and freezing the computer. I force shut down the computer because it wouldn’t un-freeze, then waited, then tried turning it back on. Now I’ve got the dreaded flashing question mark. I was going to try the first thing suggested here, but since my computer is already on, how do I safely turn it off in order to re-start it and follow this step? Many thanks.

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