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Best Window Managers for Mac in 2026

macOS Sequoia added native tiling but it's still limited. Here's a look at the best window management tools for Mac, from free options to full-featured layout managers.

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Sequoia's Tiling: A Step Forward, But Not Enough

macOS Sequoia finally added native window tiling in 2024, and it was a big deal. For the first time, you could drag windows to screen edges and get basic snap behaviour without any third-party tools.

But if you've actually used it daily, you know the limitations. Corner tiling is inconsistent, multi-monitor behaviour is unpredictable, and there's no way to save and restore window arrangements. If you restart your Mac or switch between workflows, you're manually repositioning everything again.

What to Look for in a Window Manager

The right tool depends on how you work. Basic needs include snapping windows to halves and quarters with keyboard shortcuts or drag gestures. More advanced needs include saving named layouts you can restore instantly, display profiles that adapt when you dock or undock your laptop, and time-based scheduling that sets up your workspace automatically.

The Options

Rectangle (Free)

Rectangle is the most popular free window manager on Mac. It gives you keyboard shortcuts for snapping windows to halves, thirds, and quarters. It's reliable, lightweight, and does one thing well.

The trade-off is that there's no layout saving, no display profiles, and no scheduling. If you just need keyboard-driven snapping and don't mind setting up windows manually each morning, Rectangle is hard to beat at the price.

Magnet ($8)

Magnet is the App Store favourite. Similar to Rectangle but with drag-to-edge snapping. It's clean, simple, and well-maintained. Like Rectangle, it focuses on the basics — snap and forget.

BetterSnapTool ($3)

One of the oldest Mac window managers. Cheap and functional, but the interface shows its age. If you want something that works and don't care about aesthetics, it's worth a look.

Moom ($10)

Moom is powerful. Custom grid layouts, saved arrangements, chaining commands — it can do a lot. The flip side is complexity. There's a learning curve, and the UI feels dense compared to modern Mac apps.

Layoutish

Layoutish takes a different approach. Beyond the standard keyboard shortcuts and drag snapping, it focuses on saving and restoring complete window arrangements. You can capture layouts across all your displays, assign keyboard shortcuts to them, and switch between workflows instantly.

The standout features are display profiles (automatically apply layouts when your monitor setup changes) and time-based scheduling (set your coding layout for mornings and your design layout for afternoons). It's particularly useful if you dock and undock a laptop regularly.

Native Sequoia Tiling (Free)

If your needs are minimal — snap left, snap right, maybe corners — Sequoia's built-in tiling might be enough. It's free, requires no installation, and is improving with each macOS update. Just don't expect saved layouts or multi-monitor intelligence.

Which Should You Choose?

For basic snapping on a budget, Rectangle is the answer. It's free, reliable, and has a huge community.

If you work with saved layouts, multiple monitors, or want your windows to set themselves up automatically, look at Layoutish or Moom — they solve a different problem than basic snapping tools.

The good news is that most of these tools offer free trials, so you can test before committing.

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