Clipboard history for macOS

A Mac clipboard manager
you recall by shortcut.

Clipset is a private menu bar clipboard history app for macOS. It keeps your last four copied items ready to restore with fixed Ctrl+Option shortcuts, so you stop scanning clipboard lists and start pasting from muscle memory.

Native macOS app On-device clipboard history Text, links, code, colors, images Clipboard Map on Ctrl+Option+M
Keyboard-first clipboard history

Four slots.
Four fixed shortcuts.

Most Mac clipboard managers make you open a list and search for the right item. Clipset takes the opposite approach: the newest clipboard item is always on Ctrl+Option+Down, the second is always on Ctrl+Option+Left, then Up, then Right. That consistency is the whole product.

01 Ctrl+Opt+Down Newest clipboard item The fastest way back to the last thing you copied.
Meeting at 10am, Maple room.
02 Ctrl+Opt+Left Second-most recent copy Jump one step back without opening a clipboard list.
03 Ctrl+Opt+Up Third item in history Useful when you are rotating between code, docs, and chat.
const id =
crypto.randomUUID()
04 Ctrl+Opt+Right Fourth item in history Keep one more screenshot, hex value, or reply ready.
Clipboard Image Preview
05 Ctrl+Opt+M Open the Clipboard Map See every populated slot in one focused window.
Clipboard Map
Preview every active slot.
Search intent match

A clipboard manager for Mac
when copy and paste is your workflow.

If you searched for a clipboard history app for Mac, a menu bar clipboard manager, or a private clipboard manager for developers on macOS, the pattern is usually the same: you are bouncing between a small set of copied items and you want them back fast.

For developers

Recall commands, code snippets, pull request links, JSON samples, and terminal output without breaking flow. Clipset classifies code and links automatically, which makes it a practical keyboard-driven clipboard history tool for coding on macOS.

For designers

Keep screenshots, Figma URLs, copy blocks, and hex colors close together. The fixed slot model works especially well when you are moving between image references, color values, and interface copy all day.

For operations, support, and research

Store canned replies, ticket links, issue IDs, meeting notes, and research snippets in the same short recall loop. You copy normally, restore the right slot, and paste normally. No new paste system to learn.

How it works

Copy.
Restore.
Paste.

Clipset does not replace Command+C or Command+V. It restores the right item back to your system clipboard, then gets out of the way. That makes it feel lighter than a traditional clipboard history manager while still solving the same problem.

Clipboard Map is available on Ctrl+Option+M when you want a visual overview.

I
Copy normally with Command+C
Clipset watches your clipboard and keeps the latest four items in order. Newest always lands on Ctrl+Option+Down.
II
Press the shortcut for that slot
Down for newest, left for second, up for third, right for fourth. The mapping never changes, so recall becomes muscle memory instead of visual search.
III
Paste anywhere with Command+V
The selected item is restored to the system clipboard and ready in the app you were already using. No modal, no picker, no mouse detour.
FAQ

Questions people ask before they switch
to a Mac clipboard manager.

This section is written to answer the common long-tail searches around clipboard history on Mac, private clipboard apps for macOS, and keyboard shortcut clipboard managers.

Does Mac have built-in clipboard history?

macOS keeps the current clipboard item, but it does not give you the kind of rolling multi-item history most people expect from a clipboard manager. Clipset adds a focused four-slot history so the last few copied items are still available when you need them.

Why only four clipboard slots?

Because the product is optimized for recall speed, not archive depth. Four fixed shortcuts are easy to learn, fast to reach, and enough for the common copy-paste loop where you are rotating between a handful of active items.

Is Clipset private?

Yes. The product copy and onboarding both reflect the current app behavior: clipboard content stays on your Mac, and the app securely monitors your clipboard in the background locally. That makes it a good fit if you want local clipboard history without a cloud workflow.

What can it restore back to the clipboard?

Clipset currently recognizes and restores text, links, code snippets, colors, and images. That covers the most common clipboard types for developers, designers, and everyday office work on macOS.

Are there companion tools?

Yes. Clipset works well alongside the rest of the ProductivityMacApps suite. Pair it with Loopset (our native Mac app switcher) for a full keyboard-driven workflow, TidyShot to capture and auto-paste screenshots directly into clipboard slots, or Promptheus to keep your AI prompts a hotkey away.

Privacy

Clipset positions itself as a private, on-device clipboard history app for Mac because that is what the codebase does today: it runs in the menu bar, watches the system clipboard, keeps a short local recall set, and restores selected content back into the clipboard when you trigger a shortcut.

Stop opening clipboard lists.
Start recalling by feel.

Clipset gives you the part of clipboard history that matters most on macOS: the last few copied items, always in the same place, with no visual hunt between copy and paste.

Native menu bar app. On-device clipboard history. No subscription.

⌃⌥ + Up const handler… code ⌃⌥ + Down Meeting at 10am… text ⌃⌥ + Left figma.com/… link ⌃⌥ + Right image… image