So, you’ve picked up a Mac mini to run local AI models or spin up a lightweight dev server — smart move. But here’s the immediate problem: dedicating a monitor to a machine that mostly runs in the background feels inefficient. Desk space is valuable, and an extra display is an unnecessary cost. Fortunately, macOS has already solved this with a built-in feature called Screen Sharing, and setting it up takes less than five minutes.
Enabling screen sharing on your Mac mini, First things first — you’ll need brief physical access to the Mac mini itself. If it’s a brand-new machine, connect it to any HDMI display to complete the initial macOS setup. Once that’s done, head to System Settings → General → Sharing, and toggle on “Screen Sharing.” That’s the only configuration required on the Mac mini’s end.
Worth noting: grab the machine’s local IP address or hostname from the Network section in System Settings while you’re there. You’ll need it in the next step.
Open the Screen Sharing app on your main Mac — search for it directly in Applications or use Spotlight. Enter the Mac mini’s IP address or hostname, authenticate with your credentials, and the full desktop loads instantly. From that point, your keyboard and mouse work exactly as they would on a directly connected machine.
Running Mac mini this way unlocks a few additional conveniences worth knowing about. File transfers work via direct drag-and-drop between the two machines, clipboard syncing is enabled by default, and for those on Apple Silicon running macOS Sonoma 14 or later, enabling High Performance mode noticeably smooths out the visual experience.
Consider what you’re gaining here: the Mac mini handles compute-heavy tasks quietly in the background — whether that’s running inference on a local model, managing a development environment, or serving files — while your primary workstation remains your sole point of interaction. No KVM switch, no extra display, no cable clutter.
The total cost of this solution? Zero dollars. macOS Screen Sharing ships with every Mac, requires no third-party software, and performs reliably on local networks. For anyone treating their Mac mini as a dedicated background machine, this is the most practical configuration available.
After all, why buy a monitor for a machine you never have to look at — when your Mac mini is already doing all the heavy lifting, sight unseen?