AI Writing on Mac Beyond Apple Intelligence
Apple Intelligence put AI writing help directly into macOS. Its Writing Tools — Proofread, Rewrite, Summarize, and friends — show up in the right-click and Edit menus across many apps, and for a lot of quick fixes they’re genuinely handy and completely free. So a fair question is: do you still need a separate AI writing tool on your Mac?
The honest answer: Apple Intelligence is a great baseline, but it stops short in several places that matter if you write all day. This page lays out exactly where it helps, where it stops, and how to fill the gaps — so you can complement it rather than fight it.
What Apple Intelligence Writing Tools do well
- It’s built in and free. No install, no subscription, no setup. If your Mac supports Apple Intelligence, it’s already there.
- It’s private by design. Apple processes a lot on-device and routes the rest through its Private Cloud Compute, which is a strong privacy posture.
- It covers the common asks — proofreading, tone rewrites, summaries, and lists — surfaced in the system menus.
For a casual “tidy up this paragraph,” that’s often all you need. Use it.
Where it stops
If you push it, you hit walls:
- No model choice. You get Apple’s models, full stop. You can’t pick a frontier model for a hard rewrite or route to your own key. (Apple does offer optional ChatGPT integration for some tasks, but that’s a hand-off to a chat experience, not inline control over which model rewrites your selection.)
- Menu-driven, not a fast hotkey loop. Writing Tools live in menus and a popover. There’s no fully customizable global hotkey that rewrites your selection in place with your own saved prompts, the moment you press it.
- No custom prompt presets. You get Apple’s fixed set of actions. You can’t bind “Rewrite as a native English speaker,” “Summarize in 3 bullets for execs,” or “Translate to formal French” to your own keys.
- Uneven app coverage and no live diff. Coverage depends on the app adopting the system text controls, and you don’t get a streaming redline with Tab-to-accept / Esc-to-reject and one-key recovery across every app.
- Hardware and OS gated. Apple Intelligence requires recent Apple Silicon and a current macOS. Plenty of perfectly good Macs don’t qualify.
None of this makes Apple Intelligence bad. It makes it a floor, not a ceiling.
How to think about complementing it
The smart setup isn’t “Apple Intelligence or a dedicated tool” — it’s both, for different jobs:
- Apple Intelligence for quick, casual proofreads where it’s already right there in the menu.
- A dedicated inline AI editor when you want a fast custom-hotkey loop, your own prompt presets, a specific model, a live diff with undo, guaranteed formatting preservation, and reliability in the apps Apple’s coverage is spotty in.
The two coexist fine. The dedicated tool just raises the ceiling on speed, control, and reliability.
What a dedicated inline editor adds
- A real hotkey loop with custom prompts. Select, press your key, pick (or instantly run) your own saved action — no menu hunting.
- Reliability in Electron and Java apps. Slack, VS Code, Notion, Obsidian, and JetBrains are where built-in coverage and naive tools alike get patchy; a hybrid-fallback tool makes the replace land there.
- A safety net. A streaming redline before commit, plus one-key recovery of your original — across every app, not just where the OS happens to support it.
- Formatting preservation and clean output. Bold/links/bullets/markdown survive; no AI preamble bleeds in.
- Model and key flexibility, and cross-platform behavior if you also use Windows.
Where EditSnappy fits
EditSnappy is designed to sit on top of whatever the OS gives you. It adds the fast custom-hotkey loop, your own prompt presets, and — most importantly — the reliability and safety net that built-in tools don’t guarantee:
- It works where coverage gets thin. A hybrid fallback lands the replace in Slack, VS Code, Obsidian, and JetBrains — the Electron and Java apps where in-app and system AI support is inconsistent.
- It shows you the change first. A live redline streams under your cursor — Tab to accept, Esc to keep your original — and a local history restores your text with one key.
- It keeps your formatting and strips AI slop, so only the clean result lands.
And unlike Apple Intelligence, it runs on Windows too, with the same hotkeys — so if you switch between a Mac and a PC, your workflow doesn’t change. (See A cross-platform AI writer for mixed Mac/Windows teams.)
This page is part of our desktop AI writing assistant hub. For the macOS-specific deep dive, see The best macOS system-wide AI utility.
Want to raise the ceiling on Mac AI writing? Start free, no credit card → A fast hotkey, your own prompts, the change shown before it commits — alongside Apple Intelligence, not instead of it.