Parallels Desktop 26 offers a lot to enterprise users, a little to consumers

The new version of Mac virtual machine software Parallels Desktop, which is most often used to run Windows applications on modern Macs, has just arrived. Parallels Desktop 26 has a lot to offer to the enterprise, but for most end users, it’s a pretty minor upgrade mainly meant to prepare for the upcoming launch of the next version of macOS.

(It’s worth noting that the “26” for this release represents a new versioning scheme meant to map closely to how Apple is now labeling its own operating system releases.)

With this release, the Parallels teams touts built-in support for the upcoming major OS releases from Apple and Microsoft: macOS 26 Tahoe and Windows 11 25H2. That includes changes to make Parallels play nice with macOS 26’s new background process restrictions, particularly for Coherence mode.

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