+ <br /><center><img src="startup-disk.png" align="center" width="668"
+ height="355" alt="The OS X Startup Disk tool enables you to reset a Mac
+ to use the standard OS X boot loader." border=2> </center><br />
+
+<p>Select your startup disk (<i>Macintosh HD OS X, 10.10.1</i> in this example) and then click Restart. The computer should reboot into OS X, bypassing rEFInd.</p>
+
+<p>I recommend stopping here, because the procedure for completely removing rEFInd from a Mac depends on your installation method and tends to be challenging for many Mac users, who are unfamiliar with the necessary command-line tools. Basically, you must reverse the steps described earlier, in <a href="#osx">Installing rEFInd Manually Using Mac OS X:</a></p>
+
+<ol>
+
+<li>You must first determine where rEFInd is installed. If you used the
+ default installation location, this will be <tt>/EFI/refind</tt> on
+ your main partition if you installed rEFInd 0.8.3 or earlier, or in
+ <tt>EFI/refind</tt> or <tt>EFI/BOOT</tt> on the ESP if you installed
+ rEFInd 0.8.4 with the default options. If you used the
+ <tt>--ownhfs</tt> option, rEFInd will be in the
+ <tt>System/Library/CoreServices</tt> directory on the volume you
+ specified.</li>
+
+<li>If necessary, mount the ESP or rEFInd-specific HFS+ volume, as
+ described in <a href="#osx">Installing rEFInd Manually Using Mac OS
+ X.</a></li>
+
+<li>Verify that rEFInd is installed in the directory noted in step #1. If a
+ <tt>refind.conf</tt> file is present, rEFInd is almost certainly
+ installed in that directory. If not, it's not rEFInd there and you
+ should <i>not</i> proceed. <b><i>Be extra cautious about deleting the
+ <tt>System/Library/CoreServices</tt> directory,</i></b> since that's
+ the default location of the OS X boot loader!</li>
+
+<li>Once you've identified the rEFInd directory, delete it, or at least the
+ rEFInd boot file. This file may be called <tt>refind_x64.efi</tt>,
+ <tt>bootx64.efi</tt>, <tt>boot.efi</tt>, or conceivably something else.
+ You may need to use <tt>sudo rm</tt> at the command line to accomplish
+ this task, as in <tt class="userinput">sudo rm -r
+ /Volumes/esp/EFI/refind</tt>. Note that dragging files to the Trash on
+ the Desktop may not be adequate unless you also empty the Trash.</li>
+
+</ol>
+
+<a name="uinst_windows">
+<h3>Uninstalling rEFInd from Windows</h3>
+</a>