It is done in less than 5 clicks. You can check out the step by step tutorial from here: Most importantly, there is no command staff involved.
You can install it on Mac with Homebrew:Īnother simple solution is UUByte ISO Editor for Mac, which has a new build for macOS Big Sur and supports latest Windows 10 ISO without the need to install additional software or libraries. This could be challenging task for most people. This can be done with wimlib, a command line utility for macOS. However, the latest Windows 10 ISO is too large to sit on a FAT32 partition so you have to split the install.wim into small parts. So the only working file system for Mac is FAT32 if you want to create a Windows bootable USB on Mac.
MacOS does not support NTFS by default and exFAT is not recognized as a bootable device by most computer motherboards. Windows 10 ISO image is too large (install.wim > 4GB) It wasted me hours playing with Terminal app when trying to create a Windows 10 bootable USB on my MacBook Pro with Big Sur 11.1.