Research and decide what ripping software you should use. My limited research says a good choice for Mac is XLD for free secure ripping, or dBpoweramp if you want the easiest polished paid option. XLD is widely recommended by audio users for accurate, lossless ripping on macOS, while dBpoweramp is praised for its metadata handling and smoother workflow. There may be other better ripping options (I do not know). THIS DECISION IS VERY IMPORTANT.
I suggest you test ripping 3-5 albums to ensure your ripping software works before you start with your entire catalog. Verify ripped content is okay and remove any sub folders, if any. Test to ensue these test albums play and sound okay on your equipment.
Verify that the album cover art image is included in the album’s folder as cover.jpg or folder.jpg if you want the cover art to be included with the music files more reliably (very important).
From the above test, review the average album file size to ensure you have enough disk space to store your albums. Also determine the average time it takes to rip a CD so you can estimate how long the ripping process takes. After this test, verify the album cover art is displayed correctly.
I initially ripped (FLAC Format) CDs to a large capacity hard drive. Once finished, I copied all the albums to a second hard drive as a backup. All ripped Albums were then copied to the local drive on my Infigo Audio IS-1 streamer.
Ripping CD’s takes time and is not fun. I recommend you do 15-20 CDs per day. If your collection is large, rip as many CD’s per day as possible.
VERIFY everything works and sounds correct before you start coping your full Album catalog. You only want to DO this ripping process once. Test, verify and do not rush the ripping process.

