How to Easily Put Your Mac’s Display to Sleep

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There may be many moments when you want to simply turn off your Mac’s display without shutting down the entire system. For example, you may be downloading a bunch of files, or may just want a break from work, and you may want to blank out the display, without actually disturbing your workflow.

One main option that you may already use is dimming the display completely using Apple’s function keys for increasing/reducing the display brightness. While useful, this method isn’t that efficient, and there are better and quicker options to put your Mac to sleep. We’ve detailed a few of these methods below, so check them out.

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Using the Power Button

The easiest way to put your Mac to sleep is by using the Power button. You should know that this power keyboard button is only available on newer Macs with built-in keyboards, and not on Apple’s wireless keyboards.

To use this feature, simply press the power button, which should put your Mac to sleep. On some systems though, you may need to hold down the power button for a moment (two to three seconds) and release it. Your Mac should automatically go to sleep.

Using The Apple Menu

You can also put your Mac to sleep using the Apple menu. For this, simply open the Apple menu from the top-left corner of your screen, and click on “Sleep.”

Using Keyboard Shortcuts

Another method to put your Mac to sleep is by using the following keyboard shortcuts:

  • Shift + Control + Power – for Macs with built-in keyboards having the Power button
  • Shift + Control + Eject – for Macs with keyboards having an Eject key

Note: If you’re using an external third-party keyboard, you may need to use the specific key mapped to the Power/Eject button. Also, you may need to hold down the Fn key with the keyboard shortcuts above to put your Mac to sleep, as some keyboard’s F-keys are set to be standard function keys instead of Apple’s special features.

These keyboard settings can be accessed in the “Keyboard” pane of System Preferences.

Using Terminal

Another method to turn off your Mac’s display, and hence put it to sleep, is by using a Terminal command pmset. To do this:

  1. Open Terminal on your Mac.
  2. Enter in the following command, and press Enter. Your Mac should immediately go to sleep.
pmset sleepnow

You can also use the pmset command to schedule sleep timing:

pmset schedule sleep "MM/DD/YYYY HH:MM:SS"

Make sure to replace the date with whatever day is applicable to the cycle you’re creating using the full “Month/Day/Year” formatting. The time is dictated on a 24 hour clock, so 00:00:00 corresponds to midnight. 12:00:00 is noon, 22:00:00 is 10pm and so on.

To set the alarm for your Mac, use this command:

pmset schedule wake "MM/DD/YYYY HH:MM:SS"

This command will ensure that your Mac will be up at the time that you decide for it. Macs don’t have the ability to hit the snooze alarm, so you’re guaranteed your computer will be awake right when you expect it to be.

To make your Mac take a little nap at the same time on a specific day of the week, type the command as follows:

pmset repeat sleep TRU HH:MM:SS

Using Hot Corners

The last method we have for putting your Mac to sleep is to use Hot Corners. What Hot Corners actually does is it assigns a function to a specific part of your screen. Whenever you take your Mac’s pointer into that corner and leave it there for two to three seconds, it will automatically perform the desired function. In this case, we’ll be setting a sleep function using OS X’s Hot Corners.

To do this:

1. Open System Preferences on your Mac, either by using the Apple menu, by navigating to “Applications -> System Preferences”, or by using any other method you like.

2. Open up the “Desktop & Screen Saver” menu.

3. In the “Screen saver” tab, click on “Hot Corners.”

4. Choose the corner in which you’d like to set your function, and select it’s pop-up menu. For example, in the screenshot below, I’ve selected to set my hot corner in the bottom-left corner:

5. Select the “Put Display to Sleep” option.

With the above-mentioned methods, you should be able to easily put your Mac’s display to sleep while keeping the computer active in the background.

You should also keep in mind, you’ll have to enter your account’s password if you have one set. You can disable this authentication requirement on system wake by navigating to System Preferences -> Security & Privacy, and un-selecting the option to “Require a password after sleep or screen saver begins.” You can easily wake up your Mac by simply pressing your keyboard or mouse/trackpad.

Do you have any other methods to put your Mac easily to sleep? If yes, be sure to tell us about them in the comments below.

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Shujaa Imran

Shujaa Imran is MakeTechEasier’s resident Mac tutorial writer. He’s currently training to follow his other passion become a commercial pilot. You can check his content out on Youtube

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