Avast (and Norton, and McAfee) often cause more performance problems than they solve. A disabled Avast is essentially a heavy, useless raincoat you’re carrying around. If you find yourself disabling it every single day to get work done... maybe it’s time for a breakup. If you disabled Avast and your Mac suddenly felt brand new again, don't just disable it— uninstall it properly.

Suddenly, your once-snappy MacBook Pro started sounding like a jet engine during takeoff. That innocent 5MB PDF you downloaded took three minutes to open. And the pop-ups? Oh, the pop-ups. "Congratulations! You are 1,394th visitor today!" No, wait—that’s a different kind of malware. Avast’s pop-ups just want you to upgrade to a "Pro" version that you’re pretty sure you already paid for.

macOS has built-in protection called XProtect and Notarization. It’s not perfect, but it’s quiet, polite, and doesn’t ask you to rate its performance after every scan. Most modern "Mac viruses" are actually adware or browser hijackers—things you click on yourself.

Go to the Avast app > Menu Bar > Avast > Uninstall Avast. Then, reboot. Your Mac will be lighter, faster, and happier. Replace it with common sense: don't download "MacKeeper," don't open sketchy email attachments, and keep your macOS updated. Disabling Avast is easy. It’s a temporary bandage for a performance bleed. But if you’re disabling it more than once a month, you’re not the user—the antivirus is using you .

Let’s be honest. You installed Avast Antivirus on your Mac with the best intentions. You wanted a digital bodyguard, a silent sentinel standing watch over your precious data. And for a while, it worked.