Your path: Mac with the T2 chip

Covers MacBook Pro 13" and 15" from 2018–2020 (excluding the 16"), and MacBook Air 2018+. Identifiers: MacBookPro15,x, MacBookPro16,2, MacBookPro16,3, MacBookAir8,x, MacBookAir9,1. Linux runs, but with real compromises.

Documented machines on this path

We're installing Linux on a MacBookPro15,2 (13″ 2018, 4 Thunderbolt 3 ports) as the first walked-through example. If that's your model too, the per-machine notes are there. As we (and readers) cover more T2 models, we'll add them.

Effort
Two unhurried days.
Cost
Possibly a USB webcam (around 30 EUR) if the internal camera turns out flaky on your model.
Risk
Medium — sleep is flaky, occasional macOS-update regressions, some hardware via community drivers.
Verdict
Doable if you accept the caveats below.

What you're agreeing to

The T2 chip handles a lot of your hardware — webcam, microphone, audio, Touch ID. macOS talks to it through Apple-proprietary channels. The Linux community (the t2linux project) has figured out most of it, but Apple occasionally ships firmware changes via macOS updates that affect the Linux side.

Works

Doesn't work

Flaky

One last check

If you spend your day on video calls, the maybe-flaky webcam plus the broken sleep adds up to a noticeably worse machine than you have today. Honest question: are you fine with (a) possibly keeping a USB webcam plugged in and (b) shutting down instead of closing the lid? If yes — proceed. If either is "no", keep macOS, or look at ChromeOS Flex.

The plan

  1. Try it without installing — more involved on T2, but a smart final check if you're committed.
  2. Backup & prep — back up, sign out of Apple ID, lower Secure Boot, extract Wi-Fi firmware.
  3. Create the installer USB — T2-patched Fedora. (Coming as we go.)
  4. Install — boot from USB with external keyboard and mouse. (Coming as we go.)
  5. Post-install — T2 kernel, Wi-Fi firmware, Touch Bar driver. (Coming as we go.)
  6. Daily life — apps, photos migration, suspend workaround. (Coming as we go.)

Why Fedora

For most Linux switchers we'd recommend Zorin OS or Mint. On a T2 Mac, that flips. The community project that makes Linux work on T2 (t2linux) targets Fedora and Arch first. Using Zorin or Mint on T2 means fighting the toolchain; using Fedora means following it.

Fedora's desktop (GNOME) is reasonably macOS-adjacent — menu bar at the top, hot-corner overview in place of Mission Control, an app grid in place of Launchpad. Not identical, but the muscle memory transfers within a week.