I’ve spent years testing Mac productivity apps. Some I tried once and deleted. Others stuck around for a week before I found something better. The 15 apps on this list survived all of that. They’re the tools I open every morning and rely on throughout the day.
Why a Mac-specific list? Because the best Mac apps take advantage of features that cross-platform tools ignore: Spotlight integration, native keyboard shortcuts, menu bar presence, Apple Shortcuts support, and the kind of design polish that makes you want to use a tool rather than fight against it. A well-built Mac app feels like it belongs on your system. A cross-platform tool ported to macOS rarely does.
Mac productivity apps in 2026 look different from a few years ago. Apple added more automation features to macOS. The indie Mac developer community keeps building tools that solve specific problems better than anything from a large company. And launchers have evolved from simple app switchers into full command centers for your Mac. The apps on this list reflect that evolution.
This list covers 14 apps across 10 categories, from free open-source tools to paid apps that have earned every dollar. Three cost nothing. Eight are one-time purchases. Three are subscriptions. I’ve included the price for every app so you know what you’re getting into before you download anything.
My criteria: the app had to be Mac-native or Mac-first, I had to use it in my own daily workflow, and it had to solve a real problem that macOS doesn’t handle well on its own.
What makes a great Mac productivity app?
A great Mac productivity app automates, simplifies, or speeds up tasks you perform repeatedly on macOS. It uses the operating system’s native capabilities to deliver a seamless experience rather than fighting against them.
The best ones share a few traits:
- They follow Mac design conventions, so they feel like a natural extension of macOS rather than a Windows port.
- They support keyboard-driven workflows, because reaching for the mouse costs time.
- They integrate with macOS features like Spotlight, Shortcuts, and the menu bar, working alongside your other tools instead of replacing them.
App launcher
Your launcher is the front door to everything on your Mac. Press a shortcut, type a few characters, and the right file, app, or action appears. A good launcher eliminates the time you spend clicking through folders and menus.
Alfred
Alfred has been the go-to Mac launcher for power users for over a decade, and it keeps earning that spot. On the surface, it’s a Spotlight replacement: press a keyboard shortcut, type what you want, and Alfred finds it. But the real power is in Workflows.
Workflows are local automation chains that you build or download. They can do anything from running custom scripts to connecting with web services and automating multi-step tasks. I have Workflows that search my project notes, look up documentation, convert units, and open specific file sets for different projects. The learning curve is steeper than simpler launchers, but the ceiling is higher for people who want to build their own tools.
Alfred also includes a clipboard manager, a snippet expansion system, and a powerful file search that goes deeper than Spotlight. I still prefer dedicated tools for clipboard and text expansion, but Alfred’s versions are capable enough that many people won’t need anything else.
Alfred is free for basic features. The Powerpack, which unlocks Workflows and clipboard history, is a one-time purchase of around $42.
Window management
A bigger screen doesn’t help if you spend half your time dragging windows into position. Window management tools snap your windows where they belong with a keyboard shortcut.
Rectangle
Rectangle is completely free, open-source, and better at window management than anything macOS offers natively. Drag a window to the edge of the screen, or use a keyboard shortcut, and Rectangle snaps it into position: left half, right half, top quarter, full screen, or any of its preset arrangements.
The keyboard shortcuts are what make it indispensable. I hit them dozens of times a day. Control-Option-Left for left half, Control-Option-Right for right half, Control-Option-Return for full screen. Once these shortcuts are in muscle memory, reaching for the mouse to resize a window feels primitive.
Clipboard management
Maccy
Maccy is a lightweight clipboard manager that lives in your menu bar. Free and open-source. Press Shift-Command-C and it shows your clipboard history as a searchable list. Copied something an hour ago and need it back? Maccy has it.
Alfred includes a clipboard manager in the Powerpack, and for many people that’s enough. I prefer Maccy because it’s lighter, launches faster, and its search is more reliable when I’m digging through a long history. It does one thing and does it well.
Text expansion
Typing the same text repeatedly is a problem that text expansion fixes cleanly. Text expansion tools let you type a short abbreviation and replace it with anything from a single sentence to a full page of formatted content.
TextExpander
TextExpander turns short abbreviations into full blocks of text. Type a few characters and TextExpander replaces them with anything from a quick email signature to a multi-paragraph response with fill-in fields, date math, and dropdown menus.
I type ;meeting and get a pre-filled meeting agenda template with today’s date, a dropdown for the meeting type, and a fill-in field for attendees. That Snippet took five minutes to build and saves me ten minutes every time I use it. Fill-in fields are what set TextExpander apart from simpler text replacement tools. You create Snippets that ask you questions before they expand, so the same Snippet adapts to different situations.
The team features are where TextExpander shows its real value. Shared Snippet libraries let one person update a response template and push that change to everyone on the team. For support teams, sales teams, or any group that needs consistent messaging, this removes the “everyone has their own version” problem.
The honest trade-off: TextExpander is subscription-based in a list where eight apps are one-time purchases. For individual use, macOS text replacement or Alfred’s built-in snippets might be enough. TextExpander earns its cost when you need fill-in fields, team sharing, or cross-platform support across Mac, Windows, and Chrome. Plans start at $3.33/month billed annually.
Automation
Automation tools handle the tasks you repeat throughout the day so you can stop doing them by hand. The two apps here take different approaches: one automates actions across your entire Mac, and the other automates file management in the background.
Keyboard Maestro
Keyboard Maestro is the closest thing to programming your Mac without writing code. You build macros using a visual editor: if this trigger happens, do these actions. Triggers can be keyboard shortcuts, time schedules, USB device connections, or dozens of other events. Actions include clicking buttons, typing text, moving files, running scripts, and manipulating variables.
My most-used macro renames screenshots. Every time a file appears in my Downloads folder with “Screenshot” in the name, Keyboard Maestro moves it to a sorted folder and renames it based on the current project. No more drowning in a sea of “Screenshot 2026-02-24” files.
Other macros I rely on: one that toggles my microphone and shows an on-screen indicator during video calls, one that strips formatting from copied text before pasting, and one that opens a specific set of apps and arranges their windows when I start my work day.
The learning curve is real. Keyboard Maestro’s interface looks intimidating the first time you open it. The community forum is full of shared macros you can import and modify, and each one teaches you something about what the tool can do. For a broader comparison, see our roundup of the best macro software. Keyboard Maestro costs $36 as a one-time purchase.
Hazel
Every file I download ends up in the right place without me touching it. Hazel watches folders for files that match rules you define, then takes action: move, rename, tag, archive, or delete. It runs in the background, and most days I forget it’s there until I realize how clean my folders are.
My Downloads folder has twelve Hazel rules. PDFs with “invoice” in the filename go to my Invoices folder. Disk images older than a week get trashed. ZIP files extract automatically, and the archive goes to the trash. I built these rules over time as I noticed patterns in my own file management habits.
Hazel pairs well with Keyboard Maestro. Hazel handles file organization. Keyboard Maestro handles everything else. Hazel costs $42 from Noodlesoft.
Note-taking and writing
The right note-taking app depends on how you think. Want a connected knowledge base with linked notes and community plugins? Obsidian is the answer. Prefer something beautiful and fast with less setup? Bear is the pick.
Obsidian
Obsidian is free for personal use and stores your notes as plain Markdown files on your Mac. No proprietary format, no vendor lock-in. Obsidian could disappear tomorrow and you’d still have a folder of readable text files.
I use Obsidian as my personal knowledge base. Notes link to each other using wiki-style brackets, and the graph view shows how everything connects. The plugin ecosystem is what sets it apart: community plugins add Kanban boards, spaced repetition, daily journals, Vim keybindings, and hundreds of other features. You can make Obsidian as minimal or as complex as you want.
My daily workflow starts with a daily note template that pulls in tasks, calendar events, and links to yesterday’s notes. At the end of the week, a weekly review note aggregates everything I worked on. This system grew organically from using Obsidian’s linking features, not from following someone else’s methodology. Paid add-ons for publishing and cross-device access exist, but the local experience costs nothing.
Bear
Bear is the note-taking app I recommend to people who find Obsidian overwhelming. It supports Markdown, has a gorgeous native Mac interface, and organizes notes with tags instead of folders.
Bear handles my quick captures, meeting summaries, and anything that doesn’t need Obsidian’s linking system. The search is fast, the editor is clean, and the whole experience feels effortless. Bear also handles images, sketches, and file attachments without friction.
Bear is free with limited export options. Pro unlocks advanced exports, themes, and cross-device access for $29.99/year, and the upgrade is worth it once Bear becomes part of your daily routine.
Task management
Your task manager is only useful if you open it every day. The best task apps are the ones that feel good enough to use consistently.
Things 3
Things 3 is the task manager for people who care about how software feels. The interface is gorgeous without being distracting. Every interaction is smooth and considered: dragging a task to reschedule it, using keyboard shortcuts to set dates, expanding a task to add checklist items.
I organize work into Areas and Projects, use the Today view as my daily dashboard, and use the This Evening section to plan tomorrow before I close my laptop. Things doesn’t try to be a project management platform. It’s a personal task manager, and it handles that role better than anything else on Mac.
Cultured Code, the company behind Things, is famously deliberate about what they include. No collaboration features, no commenting, no file attachments. That restraint is a feature. Things stays fast and focused because it doesn’t try to do everything. At $49.99 for the Mac app, it’s the most expensive tool on this list. iPhone and iPad versions are separate purchases. I’d still buy it again without hesitation.
Calendar
Fantastical
Fantastical replaces Apple Calendar with an interface that’s faster to use and easier to read. The standout feature is natural language input: type “Lunch with Sarah next Tuesday at noon at Blue Bottle” and Fantastical creates the event with the correct date, time, location, and invitee. No clicking through date pickers.
Apple Calendar has improved steadily, and for many people it’s enough. I switched to Fantastical because the natural language input saves me thirty seconds per event, and across a week full of meetings that adds up. The calendar sets feature sealed the deal: toggling between “Work” and “Personal” views keeps my schedule clean and focused throughout the day.
The free tier includes natural language input and basic calendar viewing. Fantastical Premium, which unlocks calendar sets, scheduling proposals, and weather integration, costs $4.75/month billed annually or $6.99/month billed monthly.
Screenshots and screen recording
macOS includes screenshot tools, but they cover the basics and stop there. Anyone who captures screenshots regularly for documentation, presentations, or bug reports will notice the difference a dedicated tool makes.
CleanShot X
macOS has built-in screenshot tools, and they handle basic captures. CleanShot X is what you move to when “basic” isn’t enough. It adds scrolling capture, screen recording with GIF export, annotation tools, a quick-access overlay for your last capture, and the ability to hide desktop icons before taking a screenshot.
At $29 as a one-time purchase, CleanShot X pays for itself within the first week for anyone who documents workflows, writes tutorials, or files detailed bug reports. The annotation features are what I reach for most. Grab a screenshot, draw arrows and highlights, blur sensitive information, and share it in under ten seconds.
Focus and distraction blocking
Focus
At $49, Focus is a one-time purchase that blocks distracting websites and apps on a schedule or on demand. Set the sites to block, start a timer or define a schedule, and Focus makes those sites unreachable until the session ends. No willpower required.
I run Focus in scheduled mode during my morning writing hours. Twitter, Reddit, YouTube, and Hacker News are all blocked from 6 AM to 11 AM. The override is password-protected, so I can’t talk myself into “quick research” when I should be writing. That friction is the whole point.
Menu bar management
Bartender
Modern Mac apps love the menu bar, and after a while the icons pile up until you can’t find anything. Bartender tames the chaos by letting you choose which icons stay visible, which hide behind a secondary bar, and which appear only when they have updates.
I keep six icons visible and hide everything else. When I need a hidden icon, I click the Bartender arrow or use a keyboard shortcut to reveal the full set. It’s a small quality-of-life improvement that removes visual clutter from a part of the screen I look at hundreds of times a day. Bartender costs $25 as a one-time purchase.
Input customization
Your Mac’s trackpad and keyboard can do more than what Apple configured out of the box. Input customization tools unlock gestures, shortcuts, and automations tied to your hardware.
BetterTouchTool
BetterTouchTool started as a trackpad gesture customizer and evolved into one of the most versatile input tools on the Mac. You can assign custom gestures to trackpad swipes, create complex keyboard shortcuts, build Touch Bar widgets, set up window snapping rules, and automate repetitive action sequences.
I use it primarily for trackpad gestures. A three-finger swipe left on a browser tab closes it. A three-finger tap on selected text sends it to my clipboard and runs a Shortcut. These gestures become second nature within days, and using a Mac without BetterTouchTool feels noticeably slower.
The configuration options run deep. You can set gestures per app, so a three-finger swipe does something different in Safari than in Finder. The window snapping system rivals Rectangle. And the keyboard shortcut manager lets you chain actions into sequences that approach Keyboard Maestro territory.
The overlap with other apps on this list is worth noting. BetterTouchTool can handle window management like Rectangle and run automations like Keyboard Maestro. Want one app that covers a lot of ground? Start here. Prefer the best dedicated tool for each category? Add BetterTouchTool for gestures on top of your existing setup. A standard license costs $12, or $24 for lifetime updates.
How to build your Mac productivity stack
Fourteen apps is a lot to take in at once. You don’t need all of them, and installing everything in one afternoon is a recipe for decision fatigue.
Start with the free tools. Alfred, Rectangle, and Maccy cost nothing in their free tiers and deliver immediate time savings. Use them for a week and notice where you still feel friction in your workflow. That friction points you toward the next app to add.
Keep typing the same text over and over? Look at text expansion. Files piling up in your Downloads folder? Hazel is the fix. Losing track of tasks? Things 3 will help. Let the problems guide your purchases.
The overlap question comes up often. Alfred includes a clipboard manager and snippet expansion in its Powerpack. BetterTouchTool can handle window management. Do you need Maccy, Rectangle, and TextExpander on top of those? Dedicated tools earn their place when you hit the limits of the built-in versions. Maccy handles large clipboard histories better. Rectangle’s keyboard shortcuts are more customizable. TextExpander’s fill-in fields and team sharing go far beyond what any launcher’s snippet feature offers.
A note on cost: this entire list runs under $425 if you buy everything at full price, and three of the apps are free. Start with the free tier, add paid tools where the time savings justify the cost, and give each new app at least a week before deciding whether it stays. Every app on this list offers either a free version or a trial, including TextExpander, so the only investment upfront is your time.
Maintenance matters too. Revisit your setup every few months and ask whether each app still earns its place. I’ve removed apps from this list over the years when macOS added native features that made them redundant, or when a free alternative caught up. The best productivity stack is one that evolves with your needs.
Frequently asked questions
What are the best free Mac productivity apps?
Three apps on this list are completely free: Rectangle for window management, Maccy for clipboard history, and Obsidian for note-taking. Alfred is also free for its core features, with the Powerpack as an optional paid upgrade. Those four alone give you a powerful productivity setup at zero cost.
Do I need a dedicated app for every category?
Not necessarily. Alfred’s Powerpack includes clipboard management and snippet expansion. BetterTouchTool handles window management alongside its gesture features. For many workflows, these overlap tools are enough. You’ll want separate apps when you need more depth. Rectangle gives you more window positions and better keyboard shortcuts. Maccy searches through longer clipboard histories faster. TextExpander adds fill-in fields, team sharing, and dynamic Snippet features that go beyond what a launcher’s built-in snippets offer. Start with fewer apps and add dedicated tools when you feel the limits.
Are Mac-only apps better than cross-platform alternatives?
Not always, but they often feel better to use. Mac-native apps integrate with Spotlight, Shortcuts, the menu bar, and drag-and-drop in ways that cross-platform tools skip. They also tend to follow Apple’s design guidelines, which means they look and behave like the rest of your system. The trade-off is portability. If you work across Mac, Windows, and Linux, prioritize cross-platform tools for your core workflow and use Mac-only apps for the gaps.
How do I decide between one-time purchase and subscription apps?
One-time purchases cost more upfront but save money over time. Subscriptions spread the cost and include ongoing updates. My approach: if the app is essential to my daily work and the developer ships frequent improvements, I’ll pay a subscription because I want continued investment in the product. If the app is stable and mature, a one-time purchase makes more sense. The subscription apps on this list are all actively developed. The one-time purchase apps are proven and stable.
What Mac productivity apps work with Apple Shortcuts?
Things 3, Fantastical, Bear, and Obsidian all support Apple Shortcuts. Things 3 and Fantastical let you create tasks and events through Shortcuts. Obsidian and Bear support Shortcuts through their respective plugin and integration systems. Alfred integrates with Shortcuts through its Workflow system. The other apps on this list have their own automation frameworks or don’t need Shortcuts integration to be useful.
