11 Popular Writing Apps for Mac in 2021!

Your Writing Deserves the Best.

Barclay Sloan
Mac O’Clock

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Photo by Daniel Romero on Unsplash

Disclaimer: This article contains some affiliate links. This means if you click on a link and purchase an item or service, I may earn a tiny commission at no cost to you.

Your Mac (whether a MacBook, iMac etc.) is undoubtedly the gateway to any digital expression. It makes things possible.
For writers, having a reliable MacBook + an excellent writing app is your palette, and brush like an artist uses for a painting.

In my opinion, Macs amount other things are an excellent choice for writing. Apart from the keyboard upgrade in the recent MacBooks (which had made headlines within the Tech community for its frustrating user experience when the new technology was installed), their minimalist and sleek design in hardware and software can be a pleasure to use and ensures you can stay focused.

There is a vast market for writing apps widely available. It can be time-consuming to know which one to kick-off with to incorporate into your work-flow. Or perhaps you are curious to see what else is available for you to try or just interested in what other’s may be using.

In this write-up, I focus on ten popular writing apps for Mac for you to explore. I have deliberately left out Microsoft Word and Google Docs from being featured as I’m sure everyone is familiar with them in what value they already serve.

Obviously, like all things, choosing the right writing app widely depends on your needs, but I am confident you will find one (maybe two) writing app(s) that will pique your interest.

Apple Pages

Pages that say it all. Beautifully.

Apple.com — Pages

Pages is Apple’s Mac-native equivalent to Microsoft’s Word. The reason I have it featured in this list is because it comes included with most Apple devices — suggesting you have access to it if alternatives should fail.

Pages weigh on simplicity and essential functions.

Pages works seamlessly across all your Apple devices, meaning you can pick up where you left off from your iMac to your iPad should you have to go out for example.

One fantastic benefit of using Pages (over the others) is the ability to use the Apple Pencil on an iPad allowing you to write, create drawings, annotate documents and select and scroll as you would with your finger.
It’s Free, but if you don’t have it installed, you can get it here.

Write!

Distraction-Free Writing.

Write! — writeapp.co

Write! claims to be the only text editor you need for distraction-free writing. Its minimalist interface helps remove distraction by hiding all the features and buttons.

When I first got into writing some years ago, this was the first writing app I landed on to hold my thoughts and prose. It was also my first exposure to a minimalist writing app to focus on distraction-free focus.

Write! carries many useful features such as a configurable autocomplete, an intelligent spellchecker and productivity counters. You can easily manage any writing project structuring using tabs, sessions and folders.

You can get the complete Write! experience for $24.95 with cloud access and maintenance updates at $4.95/yr.
It’s available on both Windows and macOS. You can check it out here.

IA Writer

Get Focused.

IA Writer 5.6.4 with full support for macOS Big Sur and Apple silicon.

One colossal feature I appriciate from IA Writer is its strict core value to focus. This is reflected in its minimal interface crafted to cut out the noise. It’s just you, your thoughts, and the words on the page (read: screen). It provides the uncluttered environment you need to write well, supported by discrete, powerful features, from Content Blocks to Syntax Highlighting with Markdown.

If writing is all you need in its most basic uncluttered form, then check out IA Writer here. Each app purchased separately.

Drafts

Where Texts Start.

Drafts

Getting words down has never been easier.

Drafts for me has been one of my jot-down note-taking apps during those epiphany moments, which would otherwise see me scrounging around for a pen and paper or ultimately trusting that I will remember but ending up forgetting.

It’s been my go-to app to quickly capture text (when I’m on the go). As Drafts have suggested on their website, its “post-its” for the digital age.

Drafts is a great writing tool for those that want to get the text down and polish it when time permits. And when you’re ready to knuckle-down, you can set up a text editing experience that’s perfect for you, with tons of interface adjustments like custom fonts and control over spacing, line height, and margins.

It features a customisable extended row above the keyboard to convert, manipulate, and transform your writing quickly. Make lists, use Markdown to get things just right.

It also integrates with a bewildering array of apps and services that might work with your workflow.

You can check out more here or get it straight for Mac here and or for your device here.

Scrivener

For writing. And writing. And writing.

Scrivener

Scrivener boasts of being the go-to writing app for writers of all kinds, used every day by best-selling novelists, screenwriters, non-fiction writers, students, academics, lawyers, journalists, translators and more.

Scrivener is tailor-made for long writing projects, allowing you to compose your text in any order, in sections as large or small as you like.

What I appreciate most about this app is the ability to link text within.

Notable features are:
Piece it Together — Switch instantly between editing your manuscript one section at a time and together as a whole.
Corkboard — virtual index card,
Outliner — the outliner lets you work with an overview of a chapter, a part, or even your whole manuscript — but puts even more information at your fingertips.
Full-Screen Writing — Blank out the rest of the world while you write.
You can check it out here.

Evernote

Accomplish more with better notes.

Evernote — Dark Mode

Evernote is a platform that allows you to take all kinds of notes. For me, it was my starting place in keeping all my notes, thoughts and prose. It helped me stay organised and was “the extension to my brain” before Notion & Roam.

Users can create notes, such as text, drawings, photographs, audio, or saved web content. Notes are stored in notebooks and can be tagged, annotated, edited, searched, given attachments, and exported.

Evernote is free with limitations that can be removed for $9.99/ month. You can check it out here.

Ulysses

The Ultimate Writing App for Mac, iPad and iPhone.

Ulysses

This Apple Design Award Winner app is top-rated among writers of any calibre.

It offers a simple and intuitive workspace you can customise to suit your preference. It features a clean, distraction-free interface,
- Markup-based text editor,
- Typewriter mode,
- A brilliant organisation and management feature — so that you can keep your work where you’d like it to be, featuring hierarchic groups,
- Let’s you write anywhere utilising full iCloud Sync across all your devices.

Ulysses has been my choice of editor for over three years now. It helps organise my writing in a structured library that fits my liking, from research to learnings, to articles and blueprints. Everything is in one place, across all my devices.

At $4.17/month with a yearly subscription, it is defiantly worth checking out.
You can find out more about Ulysses here; try it here for free, or alternatively; it is also available via Setapp here.

Bear

Write beautifully on iPhone, iPad, and Mac.

Bear — Write your way.

Bear is a beautiful, flexible writing app for crafting notes and prose. I use this as my primary note-taker, and while I feel it leans towards the note-taking side, Bear still makes for an excellent writing app.

Bear features an advanced Markup Editor that supports and highlights over 150 programming languages, in-line support for images and photos,
hashtags to quickly find and organise notes however you like,
multiple export options including HTML, PDF, DOCX, MD, JPG, and more, and at the writing of this, new features scheduled to be released include the use of tables, footnotes, style nesting, CommonMark and much more (I can’t wait!).

Bear is a perfect companion, from quick notes to deep literature with a great library structure to manage them.

At an affordable price of $14.99 annually, it’s a no-brainer to have. You can check it out here.

Grammarly (& Editor)

Elevate Your Writing.

Grammarly.

I can’t imagine writing without Grammarly. It’s my hands-down premium grammar checker and writing companion. I use it to check my work with nothing being published without it first going through Grammarly.

Grammarly checks for typos, spelling mistakes and grammar.

It’s the writing editor or extension that makes sure everything you type is not only correct but also clear and easy to read. It even has a keyboard for your iPhone and or iPad for those ‘on the go’ emails and mistake-free tweets.

Be sure to check out my article on how you can use Grammarly with Ulysses [here: Coming Soon].

While they offer a free version that packs the basic writing suggestions; spelling, grammar, punctuation and conciseness, Premium offers extra features such as tone adjustments, fluency and plagiarism detection, to name a few.

With a cost of about four $3 coffees at $11.66/ month, subscribing to premium is definitely worth its weight for the elevation. This is definitely one to keep. You can check it out here.

Alternatively, you can look into;

ProWritingAid

For the smarter writer.

ProWritingAid provides more features

Dubbed to be the less expensive alternative at around $7 per month (on a yearly subscription), ProWritingAid offers world-class grammar and style checking, combined with more in-depth reports to help you strengthen your writing. However, it’s more focused on writing style and readability.

ProWritingAid comes with a community of writers of all niches. For bloggers, content writers, authors, students and business writers.
You can check it out here.

Hemingway Editor

Make your writing bold and clear.

Hemingway

Another distraction-free writing and editing tool designed to help you polish your writing. It focuses on highlighting common errors that bring down the quality of your prose: confusing sentence construction, overuse of weak adverbs, excessive passive voice, and the like.

It’s primarily a web app (click here) but does have a desktop app if this is your preference. You can check that out here.

While there are many great writing apps in this list (with more not featured here), I hope you have found one that matches your criteria. Whether it be for casual writing or focus-driven novels, there is an app for you.

If you have found this article helpful, give it a clap and let me know which app you’ll be checking out. If you have a favourite that I have covered, let me know which one.

BACK MATTER

This article was made possible using Ulysses and my appreciation for apps, published exclusively on Medium; Mac O’Clock. Check out my other articles here.

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Barclay Sloan
Mac O’Clock

Aspiring to be a great Writer, Marketer, Graphic Designer, Coder, Photographer, Videographer and Investor. Learning is life.