How to open .XLAM files on Mac
To open .XLAM files on Mac, open Microsoft Excel for Mac.
Step-by-step instructions
- Open Microsoft Excel for Mac.
- Use Excel’s add-ins management to add/enable the “Excel add-in (.xlam)” file (browse to the .xlam file if needed).
Common issues
Excel opens, but the add-in features don’t appear
A .xlam typically needs to be installed/checked in Excel’s add-ins list; double-clicking may not reliably activate it as an add-in in every setup.
- In Excel, use the add-ins management options and add/enable the “Excel add-in (.xlam)” file.
- If it’s listed but not active, uncheck it, close Excel, reopen Excel, then re-check it.
Macros or custom functions are blocked
.xlam is macro-enabled, so Excel’s macro security settings or trust decisions can prevent the add-in’s code from running.
- If prompted, only enable the add-in’s macros when you trust the source.
- If macros are disabled and you trust the file, review Excel’s macro/security prompts and re-load the add-in.
Wrong application tries to open the file
File associations may point .xlam to a different program, but .xlam is specifically an Excel macro-enabled add-in.
- Open Microsoft Excel first, then load the .xlam via Excel’s add-ins management rather than opening it from the file manager.
- On Windows/macOS, change the default app association for .xlam to Microsoft Excel if needed.
Security note
.xlam files are macro-enabled add-ins and can contain executable macro code; treat them as potentially risky when they come from untrusted sources.