You will probably get a message saying that some of the standard fonts are missing and asking you to restore them by reinstalling the operating system…don't bother doing it though. This will pull out everything except standard fonts. Some will be system fonts and will require you to enter your password…go ahead and do it…get them all out of your system.Ħ) Under FILE, select RESTORE STANDARD FONTS. This is how I got everything running at normal speed again.Ģ) Under EDIT, select LOOK FOR ENABLED DUPLICATESģ) Automatically resolve any duplicates foundĤ) Select all fonts, then under FILE select VALIDATE FONTĥ) Remove all fonts showing any type of error or warning. Keep in mind that I don't do any work with fonts really, so it didn't matter to me if I lost any special fonts because I never actively installed any.just accumulated alot of extra fonts over the years from various apps and rolling my data over through multiple Macbook incarnations. It definitely seems to be a Font related problem, and since I could create a new user on my machine and Excel ran fine from that login, I did some detective work with fonts and worked out a way to strip down fonts in my regular account log in. Then Excel just began running incredibly slow as everyone here has experienced. I never had any problems with Excel until I got a new Macbook Pro over the holidays (Jan 2013) with Mountain Lion pre-installed.