What are the main features and advantages of Parallels Desktop for MacOS Business?
Central Management – Simplifies deployment and control across business Mac fleets.
Seamless Integration – Runs Windows apps beside Mac tools smoothly.
Mass Deployment – Speeds setup through packaged rollout and automation.
Access Control – Supports policy settings and corporate sign-in workflows.
Single App – Delivers Windows apps with minimal user distraction.
Workflow Excellence – Supports long-term productivity and efficient cross-platform administration.
Run Windows – Windows, Linux and macOS virtual machines on Mac
Coherence mode – Windows apps run alongside Mac apps directly
Central management – License portal, sublicense keys, SSO sign-in
Mass deployment – Push Parallels and prepared VMs via MDM
Performance Metric – Up to 32 vCPUs and 128 GB vRAM per VM
Important – On Apple silicon only Arm Windows 11 runs natively
Parallels Desktop for Mac Business Edition runs Windows, Linux and macOS virtual machines on Intel and Apple silicon Macs, using the full Pro feature set plus centralized IT administration. It lets a team standardize one Windows environment across every Mac and manage all seats from a single license portal.
One environment – Standardize the same Windows image across teams
Single portal – Manage every seat from Parallels My Account
Fast onboarding – New hires get a working VM quickly
Microsoft authorized – Sanctioned Windows 11 on Apple silicon Macs
Contractor control – Restrict and expire VMs for outside users
24/7 support – Business-level phone and email assistance included
It runs Windows, Linux and macOS virtual machines directly on Intel and Apple silicon Macs, so staff use Windows-only software without a second PC or rebooting. The Business Edition is built on the Pro engine and adds IT tooling: a license management portal, single sign-on, restricted virtual machines and mass deployment. A typical use is giving Mac-equipped employees access to applications such as Microsoft Office, QuickBooks, SAP or in-house ERP systems that ship only for Windows. Coherence mode displays those Windows apps in their own windows next to Mac apps, so users rarely see the full Windows desktop. The host application installs only on macOS, and the guest operating system itself is not included.
Business Edition contains every Pro capability and adds centralized administration that the consumer editions lack. Standard caps a virtual machine at 4 virtual CPUs and 8 GB of vRAM, while Pro and Business raise that ceiling to 32 vCPUs and 128 GB on Intel Macs. Only Business provides the Parallels My Account portal, the ability to split one key into sublicenses, single sign-on through Microsoft Entra ID or Okta, and mass deployment through MDM tools. It also adds compliance controls such as restricted virtual machines and VM expiration dates, plus 24/7 phone and email support. The table below summarizes the differences.
| Feature | Standard | Pro | Business |
|---|---|---|---|
| Max vCPUs per VM | 4 | 32 | 32 |
| Max vRAM per VM | 8 GB | 128 GB | 128 GB |
| Command-line interface | ✕ | ✓ | ✓ |
| License management portal | ✕ | ✕ | ✓ |
| Single sign-on (SSO) | ✕ | ✕ | ✓ |
| Mass deployment (MDM) | ✕ | ✕ | ✓ |
| Restricted / expiring VMs | ✕ | ✕ | ✓ |
| 24/7 business support | ✕ | ✕ | ✓ |
On Apple silicon Macs it runs the Arm version of Windows 11, and most 32-bit and 64-bit x86 apps then run through Microsoft's built-in Prism translation layer. It is the only Microsoft-authorized way to run Windows 11 Pro and Enterprise on M-series Macs, which keeps those Windows installations eligible for updates and Microsoft support. Some software still will not work: nested virtualization is unavailable, so Hyper-V and WSL2 do not run (WSL1 is the workaround), and 3D acceleration is capped at DirectX 11.1, so several recent games fail to launch. Parallels Desktop 26 adds a preview x86 emulation mode that can boot full x86 Windows and Windows Server, but it is slow, with multi-minute boot times and no USB passthrough. If your work depends on Hyper-V, anti-cheat games or heavy DirectX 12 titles, confirm support before standardizing on Apple silicon.
Every seat is controlled from the Parallels My Account portal, where an administrator splits one business key into sublicenses and assigns them to groups. Deployment runs either through an invitation email or, for larger fleets, through Mac management (MDM) tools that push Parallels Desktop and a prepared virtual machine image to each Mac. Administrators can provision a corporate VM from a link, lock VM settings behind a password, set an expiration date on a VM, and require sign-in through a corporate account. These controls are the main reason to pick Business over Pro: they let IT standardize one Windows image and reclaim or expire access when a contractor leaves. None of this management layer exists in the Standard or Pro editions.
It fits organizations that issue Macs but still depend on a few Windows-only applications, such as a finance team running Windows QuickBooks or engineers using Windows AutoCAD on MacBooks. Before standardizing, check three things: that your required Windows apps run on Arm Windows 11 (or tolerate the slow x86 preview), that your Macs are sized for the workload, and that you actually need the central portal rather than individual Pro keys. The deciding factor over Pro is fleet management: sublicense control, MDM deployment and VM restrictions for compliance. If you run only one or two Macs and do not need central administration, the Pro edition delivers identical virtualization performance without the management portal.
No. The Windows, Linux or other guest operating system is not included and must be obtained separately. Parallels Desktop supplies the virtualization layer and, on Apple silicon, is Microsoft-authorized to run Arm versions of Windows 11 Pro and Enterprise.
Not directly. Intel Macs create x86 virtual machines and Apple silicon Macs create Arm virtual machines, and the two architectures are not interchangeable. The recommended path is to build a new Arm-based VM and copy data across, though Pro and Business licenses can also start an opposite-architecture VM through the slower Parallels emulator.
Yes, but only as a guest virtual machine, never as the host. On Apple silicon, Windows Server 2019 and 2022 run through the Parallels Desktop 26 x86 emulation preview, which works but is slow; on Intel Macs they run natively. The Parallels Desktop application itself installs only on macOS.
| Operating Systems | macOS Tahoe 26 macOS Sequoia 15 macOS Sonoma 14 macOS Ventura 13 macOS Monterey 12 macOS Big Sur 11 macOS Catalina 10.15 macOS Mojave 10.14 |
| Processor | Any Apple silicon chip M series or A18 Pro. Intel Core i5 / Core i7 / Core i9 / Intel Core M / Xeon processor. |
| Memory RAM | 4 GB RAM minimum. 16 GB RAM or more for graphics-intensive applications, software development, high loads, and multiple virtual machines. |
| Hard Disk | 600 MB for Parallels Desktop application installation. Additional disk space for virtual machines. At least 16 GB required for Windows OS. SSD drive recommended for best performance. |
| Display | Standard display compatible with the respective operating system. |
| Special Features | Run Windows, Linux, and other supported operating systems on Mac. Coherence Mode for seamless Mac and Windows app use. Shared Profile folders between macOS and virtual machines. Use Mac camera, microphone, keyboard, mouse, trackpad, and USB devices inside virtual machines. Business Edition license management, centralized deployment, virtual machine encryption, lockable restrictions, expiration controls, and isolation options. |
| Note | Internet connection required for product activation, updates, and select features. macOS Big Sur, macOS Catalina, and macOS Mojave use legacy compatibility paths from the official KB and install an earlier supported Parallels version instead of Parallels Desktop 26. On Apple silicon Macs, only Arm guest operating systems are officially supported, though Parallels Desktop 26 includes a preview x86 emulation feature for some x86 operating systems. Virtual machines created on Intel-based Macs cannot be used directly on Apple silicon Macs, and vice versa. |
By continuing to browse our site you agree to our use of cookies, revised Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.
More information about cookies