However, it's off by default and requires some messing around in the terminal to enable it. Apple's Experimental NTFS-Write Support: The macOS operating system includes experimental support for writing to NTFS drives.It's slower than paid solutions and automatically mounting NTFS partitions in read-write mode is a security risk.
Unfortunately, this take a bit of extra work to install, especially on Macs with the new System Integrity Protection feature, added in 10.11 El Capitan. Free Third-Party Drivers: There's a free and open-source NTFS driver you can install on a Mac to enable write support.These are paid solutions, but they're easy to install and should offer better performance than the free solutions below. Paid Third-Party Drivers: There are third-party NTFS drivers for Mac that you can install, and they'll work quite well.There are several options for this, and you'll need to choose one: macOS can natively read and write to exFAT drives, just like Windows can. However, for external drives, you should probably use exFAT instead. This could be useful if you want to write to a Boot Camp partition on your Mac, as Windows system partitions must use the NTFS file system.