Maccy Alternatives

Seven Mac clipboard managers compared. What Maccy does well, where it hits its limits, and which alternatives make sense for which workflow.

Published April 28, 2026 9 min read By John Sciacchitano

Maccy is the open-source clipboard manager most Mac developers and power users land on first. It's free, native, well-maintained, and small. For 80% of clipboard-history use cases it's exactly the right answer. The other 20%, people who want image previews, snippet libraries, sync across devices, or specific keyboard ergonomics, eventually look around for what else exists.

Disclosure: I ship TeenyClip, a paid clipboard manager in this category. I'll cover Maccy honestly first and try to be even-handed when comparing. If your need is fully met by free Maccy, the right answer is free Maccy.

What Maccy does well

Maccy stores your clipboard history in a searchable, keyboard-driven popup. C brings up the popup. Type to filter. Press to paste the highlighted item. The default keyboard shortcut, the default settings, and the default UI are all reasonable. You can install it via Homebrew or the App Store and have it working in under two minutes.

Maccy is open source under MIT. The author Alex Rodionov has maintained it consistently since 2019. The release cadence is steady and the codebase is small enough that a determined Mac developer could fork it if needed. maccy.app

Where Maccy stops

Things Maccy doesn't do, by design or by limitation:

  • Image previews. Maccy stores image clips but the popup shows them as small thumbnails or just text descriptors. Several alternatives do this better.
  • Pinned snippets. Maccy has favorites but they exist in the same list as history items. Snippet-style pinning with a separate keyboard shortcut isn't built in.
  • Cross-device sync. Maccy is single-Mac. No iCloud sync, no Dropbox, no manual export between machines.
  • Rich text formatting controls. Maccy preserves formatting from the source. If you copy from a styled doc and paste into a plain-text field, the formatting comes along. Some alternatives offer "paste as plain text" toggles natively.
  • Per-app rules. Maccy applies the same clipboard tracking everywhere. Some alternatives let you exclude apps (good for password managers, banking apps, anything with sensitive data).

None of these are bugs in Maccy. The author has explicitly kept Maccy minimal. They're just things some users want from a clipboard manager that Maccy doesn't provide.

The alternatives, ranked by what they're best at

TeenyClip, best paid Maccy alternative

$4.99 once

Native Swift, single-purpose, $4.99 lifetime. Adds image previews in the popup, pinned snippets with a separate keyboard shortcut, app exclusion lists, and a slightly different popup UI optimized for browsing. Same general shape as Maccy. The main reason to pick it over Maccy is if you want polished paid product with one-time pricing and direct support, or you specifically want the features above.

Bias note: I ship TeenyClip. I'm trying to describe it accurately. teenyclip.com

Best for: people who want Maccy-shape with extras and don't mind paying.

Paste, best for cross-device sync

$2.49/mo or $14.99/yr · subscription

Paste by FiftyThree (now Wallflower Tools) syncs clipboard history across Mac, iPhone, and iPad via iCloud. Polished UI with image and code previews. The catch is the subscription model, which I generally argue against in my piece on Mac software subscriptions. But if cross-device clipboard sync is the thing you want, Paste is the most polished option.

Best for: people who clip on iPhone and want it to show up on Mac (and vice versa).

Pastebot, best for power users

$19.99 once

Tapbots' clipboard manager. The deepest feature set on this list: filters that transform clipboard content (strip formatting, lowercase, base64-encode), pasteboard sequences (paste a sequence of items in order), per-app rules. The learning curve is real. Tapbots' build quality is excellent and the one-time price is reasonable for the depth. tapbots.com/pastebot

Best for: developers, technical users, people who want to chain clipboard transforms.

Alfred Clipboard History, best if you already have Alfred

£34 once for Powerpack

If you already use Alfred (the launcher), it includes a clipboard history feature in the Powerpack. It's not as feature-rich as the dedicated apps, but if you've already paid for Alfred you don't need a separate clipboard manager unless you want one. Same shape applies for Raycast.

Best for: existing Alfred users who haven't enabled the clipboard feature.

Raycast Clipboard, best modern launcher integration

Free / Pro $10/mo

Raycast's clipboard history is part of the launcher. Free tier covers basic clipboard. Pro adds AI-assisted formatting and sync. As with Alfred: no need for a separate app if Raycast is already part of your workflow.

Best for: existing Raycast users.

Copilot for Mac, best for keyboard purists

$10 once

Note: not Microsoft Copilot. There's a smaller indie app called Copilot for Mac that focuses on text-only clipboard history with vim-style navigation. Niche. Worth knowing about if you're a vim user.

Best for: vim users. Niche.

Flycut, most minimal alternative

Free · Open source

Flycut is what Maccy aspires to be more of. Even simpler. Plain text only. Originally a fork of Jumpcut from the late 2000s. Still maintained, still works. Worth knowing about if you want something even smaller than Maccy.

Best for: people who think Maccy has too many features.

Side-by-side comparison

App Price Image previews Sync Native
Maccy Free Limited No Yes (Swift)
TeenyClip $4.99 once Yes No (Mac only) Yes (Swift)
Paste $15/yr Yes iCloud (Mac/iOS) Yes
Pastebot $20 once Yes iCloud (Mac/iOS) Yes
Flycut Free No (text only) No Yes
Alfred clipboard £34 once (suite) Limited No Yes
Raycast clipboard Free / $10/mo Yes Pro tier Yes

The full broader category roundup is in Mac clipboard managers compared.

How to choose

Three quick decision rules:

If you only need text clipboard history and zero settings: install Maccy or Flycut. Stop reading.

If you want image previews, snippets, and don't want subscription: install TeenyClip ($5 once) or Pastebot ($20 once). The TeenyClip price point is for people who want lightweight; Pastebot is for people who want deep.

If you clip on iPhone or iPad and want it on Mac: Paste is the polished pick. Pastebot also has it. Maccy doesn't.

If you already use Alfred or Raycast: use their built-in clipboard. Don't add a duplicate app.

Some honest things I'd say to a Maccy user considering switching

Maccy is genuinely good. It's not the kind of "free alternative" that's clearly worse than the paid options. For a lot of users the right answer is to keep using Maccy. The reasons to switch are specific:

  • You keep wanting to glance at an image you copied earlier and Maccy's tiny thumbnail isn't enough.
  • You have a few snippets you paste constantly and you want them at V+number rather than mixed in with history.
  • You're using two Macs and want clipboard sync.
  • You want the app to exclude 1Password, Apple Pay, and your bank app from clipboard tracking by default.
  • You want to support an indie developer with a small purchase.

If none of those apply, stay on Maccy. It's free for a reason and that reason is that the developer is fine with you using it forever without paying.

The polished paid Maccy alternative.

TeenyClip is $4.99 once. Image previews, pinned snippets, app exclusions. Native Swift. 3-day free trial.