Connecting old iMac to newer iMac; possible?

I have a 27-inch, late 2012 iMac that I would love to continue using because of the big screen. I also have a 21.5-inch, 2019 iMac that I was able to update the OS, but the screen is too small for my aging eyes.


I would like to connect the computers together and use both of them, but I am confused about the many differing ports on the back of the two computers.


Is there a cable that would allow me to use both computers?


iMac 27″, macOS 10.15

Posted on Dec 30, 2025 6:23 AM

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Posted on Dec 30, 2025 8:22 AM

It sounds like you want to use the screen of the 27" Late 2012 iMac as a second screen for the 21.5" 2019 iMac.


Your 2012 iMac does support Target Display Mode, using Thunderbolt input. Unfortunately, taking advantage of that feature is not very feasible.

  • Apple placed restrictions on Target Display Mode such that the iMac acting as the "display" has to be running High Sierra or earlier. That might mean downgrading, or dual-booting, the 27" 2012 iMac.
  • Apple placed restrictions on the other Mac so that it has to have a hardware release year of 2019 or earlier and has to be running Catalina or earlier. Your 2019 iMac can run Sequoia (which is still one of the "most recent 3"), and it would not be worth downgrading to Catalina just so that you could use the old iMac as a Target Display.
  • TDM on a 2012 iMac requires Thunderbolt input. You would need to purchase a $50 Apple Thunderbolt 3-to-2 adapter and a hard-to-find, $30+ Thunderbolt 1/2 cable (not an inexpensive USB-C to Mini DisplayPort adapter cable).


I would suggest saving the $80+ you would have to spend on specialized Thunderbolt cabling – and putting that money towards the purchase of a good 27" 2560x1440 ("1440p, 2.5K") or 27" 3840x2160 ("4K") monitor.


You can get some decent 27" 4K monitors with IPS panels and 100% or near-100% coverage of sRGB for $300 – $400 USD. Your Mac would probably be able to run them in Retina "like 1920x1080" mode (large print, but taking advantage of the 4K resolution for increased sharpness) or Retina "like 2560x1440" mode (similar size print to the print on your 27" 2012 iMac, with somewhat more detail).


A further bonus is that when it was time to upgrade to your next Mac, you could use that 27" 4K monitor with the new Mac.

6 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Dec 30, 2025 8:22 AM in response to Teresia Scott

It sounds like you want to use the screen of the 27" Late 2012 iMac as a second screen for the 21.5" 2019 iMac.


Your 2012 iMac does support Target Display Mode, using Thunderbolt input. Unfortunately, taking advantage of that feature is not very feasible.

  • Apple placed restrictions on Target Display Mode such that the iMac acting as the "display" has to be running High Sierra or earlier. That might mean downgrading, or dual-booting, the 27" 2012 iMac.
  • Apple placed restrictions on the other Mac so that it has to have a hardware release year of 2019 or earlier and has to be running Catalina or earlier. Your 2019 iMac can run Sequoia (which is still one of the "most recent 3"), and it would not be worth downgrading to Catalina just so that you could use the old iMac as a Target Display.
  • TDM on a 2012 iMac requires Thunderbolt input. You would need to purchase a $50 Apple Thunderbolt 3-to-2 adapter and a hard-to-find, $30+ Thunderbolt 1/2 cable (not an inexpensive USB-C to Mini DisplayPort adapter cable).


I would suggest saving the $80+ you would have to spend on specialized Thunderbolt cabling – and putting that money towards the purchase of a good 27" 2560x1440 ("1440p, 2.5K") or 27" 3840x2160 ("4K") monitor.


You can get some decent 27" 4K monitors with IPS panels and 100% or near-100% coverage of sRGB for $300 – $400 USD. Your Mac would probably be able to run them in Retina "like 1920x1080" mode (large print, but taking advantage of the 4K resolution for increased sharpness) or Retina "like 2560x1440" mode (similar size print to the print on your 27" 2012 iMac, with somewhat more detail).


A further bonus is that when it was time to upgrade to your next Mac, you could use that 27" 4K monitor with the new Mac.

Dec 30, 2025 6:31 AM in response to Teresia Scott

Review the article: Use your iMac as a display with target display mode - Apple Support

Target display mode is a feature available with late 2009-Mid 2014 iMacs. The display Mac has to be running macOS High Sierra or older and the signal producing Mac has to be running macOS Catalina (ca. 2019) or earlier. They require a Thunderbolt or Thunderbolt 2 cable.


This could only be done with a very few and very specific older iMacs and support was very limited. Read this topic for a 2021 perspective on this: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/252271436?answerId=254300142022#254300142022

and this 2021 post by Allan Jones about software limitations:

https://discussions.apple.com/thread/252344497?answerId=254428494022#254428494022


and read about Screen sharing Share the screen of another Mac - Apple Support





Dec 30, 2025 3:55 PM in response to Teresia Scott

It might be possible to use the old iMac in Target Disk Mode. This would make it appear to be an external disk drive. However, that would not be especially practical. You would probably need to connect the Macs using Thunderbolt, which would mean spending $80+ on specialized connection hardware. An iMac running in Target Disk Mode would use a lot more electricity than a new HDD or SSD. I am guessing that that 2012 iMac has a mechanical hard drive that is slow compared to today’s SSDs, and that might not have more capacity than them. And a 13-year-old hard drive might be that much closer to failure.


Note that even in the old days, it was never possible to run a Mac in Target Display Mode and Target Disk Mode at the same time.

Connecting old iMac to newer iMac; possible?

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