Pasteable vs the field

Fair, specific comparisons — we name what each competitor does well, then show exactly where Pasteable wins. Pick the tool you are comparing against:

Pasteable vs Paste

the Mac clipboard classic

Paste (pasteapp.io) is one of the oldest and prettiest Mac clipboard managers — rich previews, pinboards, and iCloud sync. It is a polished Mac app. The catch: it stays on Apple platforms, it is a subscription, and its sync is plain iCloud rather than end-to-end encrypted content.

Free + one-time Pro vs Subscription

Pasteable vs Raycast

the Mac launcher with a clipboard history

Raycast is a superb Mac launcher, and it bundles a free, fast clipboard history. For Mac-only users who already live in Raycast, that history is great. But clipboard is a side feature of a launcher — there is no cross-device clip sync, no Windows or Linux, and the Pro tier is meaningfully more expensive than a clipboard manager needs to be.

Free + one-time Pro vs Free / Pro $8·mo

Pasteable vs Maccy

the lightweight, open-source Mac manager

Maccy is beloved: open-source, lightweight, private, and nearly free. It is exactly the right tool if you want a no-frills, local-only Mac clipboard history. Its limits are scope — basic features, Mac only, and no cloud sync, AI, mobile, or expansion. Pasteable’s free tier covers that local-first use case and then keeps going.

Free + one-time Pro vs $9.99 one-time

Pasteable vs Ditto

the powerful, free Windows clipboard manager

Ditto is a legend on Windows — free, open-source, and surprisingly powerful, with network-based sync between machines. For a Windows-only power user it is a serious tool. Its age shows in the UI, sync is manual network sharing rather than end-to-end encrypted cloud, and there is no Mac, Linux, iOS, Android, or AI.

Free + one-time Pro vs Free

Start free, on every device

Local-first history today. Cross-device sync, AI search, and text expansion whenever you want them.