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macos productivity cheatsheet keyboard-shortcuts apple 13 min read

macOS Keyboard Shortcuts Cheat Sheet: The Ones Worth Knowing

Leo
By Leo
macOS Keyboard Shortcuts Cheat Sheet: The Ones Worth Knowing

Most Mac users know Cmd+C and Cmd+V. The shortcuts in this cheat sheet are the ones that separate casual users from people who never touch the mouse.

TL;DR
  • SystemCmd+Space, Cmd+Tab, Cmd+, are the three you’ll reach for every hour.
  • Windows — Mission Control (Ctrl+Up) and Cmd+~ cycle through everything without a mouse.
  • Text editingOption+Delete and Cmd+Delete kill whole words and lines, not one character at a time.
  • ScreenshotsCmd+Shift+4 gives you a crosshair; add Ctrl to copy to clipboard instead of saving a file.
  • FinderCmd+Shift+G jumps to any path instantly, including hidden folders like ~/.ssh.

What are the essential macOS system shortcuts every user needs?

These are the ones you’ll reach for dozens of times a day. Start here.

ShortcutAction
Cmd + SpaceOpen Spotlight search
Cmd + TabSwitch between open apps
Cmd + ~Switch between windows of the same app
Cmd + QQuit the current app
Cmd + WClose the current window or tab
Cmd + MMinimize window to Dock
Cmd + HHide current app
Cmd + Option + HHide all other apps
Cmd + ,Open app Preferences / Settings
Cmd + ZUndo
Cmd + Shift + ZRedo
Cmd + ASelect all
Cmd + FFind (search in current app)
Cmd + PPrint
Cmd + SSave
Cmd + Shift + SSave As
Most under-used shortcut on macOS

Cmd + , opens Preferences in virtually every Mac app — Safari, VS Code, Slack, Figma, all of them. Muscle-memory this one first.


How do I manage windows and spaces without touching the mouse?

macOS doesn’t have Windows-style snapping by default — native window tiling only arrived in Sequoia. But keyboard navigation across desktops and apps is fast once you know it.

Mission Control and Spaces

ShortcutAction
Ctrl + Up ArrowOpen Mission Control (all windows overview)
Ctrl + Down ArrowShow all windows of the current app
Ctrl + Left / Right ArrowSwitch between Spaces (desktops)
Ctrl + 1, Ctrl + 2, etc.Jump directly to a numbered Space
F3Open Mission Control (alternate key)

Window Tiling (macOS Sequoia 15 and later)

ShortcutAction
Ctrl + Cmd + Left ArrowTile window to left half
Ctrl + Cmd + Right ArrowTile window to right half
Ctrl + Cmd + Up ArrowMaximize window via tiling
Ctrl + Cmd + FToggle full-screen mode

App and Window Switching

ShortcutAction
Cmd + TabCycle forward through open apps
Cmd + Shift + TabCycle backward through open apps
Cmd + ~Cycle forward through windows of the same app
Cmd + Option + MMinimize all windows of current app
Cmd + Option + WClose all windows of current app
Quit from the app switcher

Hold Cmd + Tab to open the app switcher, then press Q while holding Cmd to quit that app directly — without switching to it first. Faster than hunting for a Dock icon.


Which Finder shortcuts actually save time?

Finder has a solid keyboard interface. Most people never find it. Here’s the part worth learning.

ShortcutAction
Cmd + NNew Finder window
Cmd + TNew Finder tab
Cmd + Shift + NNew folder
Cmd + Option + NNew Smart Folder
Cmd + DeleteMove selected item to Trash
Cmd + Shift + DeleteEmpty Trash
Cmd + Option + Shift + DeleteEmpty Trash without confirmation dialog
SpaceQuick Look preview of selected file
EnterRename selected file
Cmd + OOpen selected file
Cmd + DDuplicate selected item
Cmd + IGet Info for selected item
Cmd + Shift + GGo to Folder (type any path, including hidden)
Cmd + Shift + HGo to Home folder
Cmd + Shift + DGo to Desktop
Cmd + Shift + AGo to Applications folder
Cmd + Shift + CGo to Computer view
Cmd + Up ArrowGo to parent folder
Cmd + Down ArrowOpen selected folder
Cmd + [Go back
Cmd + ]Go forward
Cmd + 1View as Icons
Cmd + 2View as List
Cmd + 3View as Columns
Cmd + 4View as Gallery
Navigate to any hidden folder

Cmd + Shift + G accepts absolute Unix paths — /Library, ~/.ssh, /usr/local/bin, all of it. It’s the fastest way to reach folders that don’t appear in the sidebar.


How do I edit and select text faster with keyboard shortcuts?

These shortcuts work system-wide — in Notes, in browsers, in any text field. The Option-key word-jump shortcuts alone will save you minutes every day.

Cursor Movement

ShortcutAction
Option + Left / Right ArrowMove cursor one word at a time
Cmd + Left ArrowJump to beginning of current line
Cmd + Right ArrowJump to end of current line
Cmd + Up ArrowJump to top of document
Cmd + Down ArrowJump to bottom of document

Selection

ShortcutAction
Shift + Left / Right ArrowExtend selection one character
Shift + Option + Left / RightExtend selection one word
Shift + Cmd + Left ArrowSelect from cursor to start of line
Shift + Cmd + Right ArrowSelect from cursor to end of line
Shift + Cmd + Up ArrowSelect from cursor to top of document
Shift + Cmd + Down ArrowSelect from cursor to bottom of document

Deletion

ShortcutAction
DeleteDelete character to the left (Backspace)
Fn + DeleteDelete character to the right (Forward delete)
Option + DeleteDelete entire word to the left
Option + Fn + DeleteDelete entire word to the right
Cmd + DeleteDelete from cursor to beginning of line
The deletion shortcut that changes everything

Option + Delete kills the entire word to the left of the cursor. Stop backspacing letter-by-letter to fix a typo three words back. This is the one shortcut that immediately changes how you type.


What are the screenshot shortcuts and how do I control where they go?

macOS has a built-in screenshot toolkit most users only half-know. Here’s the full picture.

ShortcutAction
Cmd + Shift + 3Screenshot entire screen — saved to Desktop
Cmd + Shift + 4Screenshot selected area with crosshair — saved to Desktop
Cmd + Shift + 4, then SpaceScreenshot a specific window — click to capture
Cmd + Shift + 5Open Screenshot toolbar (area, window, screen, video recording)
Cmd + Shift + 6Screenshot Touch Bar (supported Macs only)
Ctrl + Cmd + Shift + 3Screenshot entire screen — copied to clipboard
Ctrl + Cmd + Shift + 4Screenshot selected area — copied to clipboard
Ctrl + Cmd + Shift + 4, then SpaceScreenshot window — copied to clipboard
Skip the Desktop file entirely

Add Ctrl to any screenshot shortcut to send the image directly to the clipboard. Paste it straight into Slack, Linear, Notion, or email without hunting for a file on your Desktop.

The Screenshot toolbar (Cmd+Shift+5)

Cmd + Shift + 5 opens a persistent toolbar. From there you can record your screen, set a countdown timer, choose a save location, and toggle whether the cursor appears in recordings. It fully replaces the old QuickTime screen-recording workflow.


How do I use Spotlight for more than just launching apps?

Spotlight is a calculator, unit converter, dictionary, and flight tracker. Most people open it, type an app name, and press Enter. Here’s what they’re missing.

ShortcutAction
Cmd + SpaceOpen Spotlight
Cmd + BSearch the web for the current query (while Spotlight is open)
Cmd + ReturnShow selected result in Finder
Cmd + LJump to a dictionary definition result
Option + ReturnOpen the enclosing folder of a selected result
What Spotlight can do without opening any app

Type directly into Spotlight for instant results — no app required:

  • 19 * 48 → calculates inline
  • 25 USD to INR → live currency conversion
  • define: ephemeral → dictionary definition
  • A city name → current weather
  • A flight number → live flight status

Which browser shortcuts work across Safari, Chrome, and Firefox?

These are universal. Safari, Chrome, Firefox — the same shortcuts apply across all three.

ShortcutAction
Cmd + TNew tab
Cmd + WClose current tab
Cmd + Shift + TReopen last closed tab
Cmd + LFocus address bar
Cmd + RReload page
Cmd + Shift + RHard reload (bypass cache)
Cmd + Left ArrowGo back
Cmd + Right ArrowGo forward
Cmd + 1 through Cmd + 9Jump to tab by number
Cmd + Option + Left ArrowSwitch to previous tab
Cmd + Option + Right ArrowSwitch to next tab
Ctrl + TabCycle to next tab
Ctrl + Shift + TabCycle to previous tab
Cmd + FFind in page
Cmd + DBookmark current page
Cmd + Shift + BToggle bookmarks bar
SpaceScroll down one page
Shift + SpaceScroll up one page
Cmd + Up ArrowScroll to top of page
Cmd + Down ArrowScroll to bottom of page
Cmd + +Zoom in
Cmd + -Zoom out
Cmd + 0Reset zoom to 100%
Reopen multiple closed tabs

Cmd + Shift + T works repeatedly — not just once. Close five tabs by mistake? Press it five times. It restores them in reverse order, most-recently-closed first.


Summary

You don’t need to memorize all of these at once. Pick one section. Use those shortcuts for two days. Then pick another. The goal is muscle memory, not a quiz.

The five that will change your daily workflow fastest:

  • Cmd + , — settings in any app, instantly
  • Option + Delete — delete word-by-word, not character-by-character
  • Ctrl + Cmd + Shift + 4 — screenshot directly to clipboard, no Desktop file
  • Cmd + Shift + G in Finder — navigate to any path including hidden folders
  • Ctrl + Up — Mission Control, because spatial navigation beats clicking

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I see all available keyboard shortcuts on macOS?

Go to System Settings → Keyboard → Keyboard Shortcuts. Every default shortcut is listed there, organized by category. You can also customize or disable any of them from the same panel.

Can I create my own custom keyboard shortcuts for any app?

Yes. In System Settings → Keyboard → Keyboard Shortcuts → App Shortcuts, click the + button, choose an app (or “All Applications”), type the exact menu item name, and assign a key combination. This works for any menu item in any native Mac app.

Why does Cmd + Delete not always delete an entire line?

Cmd + Delete deletes from the cursor position to the beginning of the current line — not the whole line. If the cursor is already at the start of a line, it does nothing. To delete a full line in apps like VS Code, use Cmd + Shift + K instead.

What’s the difference between hiding an app and minimizing it?

Cmd + H hides the app — all its windows disappear instantly but the app stays active. Cmd + M minimizes only the current window to a thumbnail in the Dock. Hiding is faster to reverse (Cmd + Tab brings everything back at once); a minimized window requires clicking the Dock thumbnail specifically.

Do these shortcuts work on macOS Sonoma and Sequoia?

Yes. All shortcuts in this cheat sheet work on macOS Sonoma (14) and Sequoia (15). The Window Tiling section (Ctrl + Cmd + Arrow keys) requires Sequoia (15) or later — native window tiling was introduced in that release. On Sonoma and earlier, use a third-party tool like Magnet or Rectangle instead.