Comparison

Facet vs Alfred.

Alfred is a beloved keyboard launcher and automation tool — a search bar that runs workflows, snippets, and clipboard history. Facet is a visual Launchpad-style app grid you browse and click. They overlap on “launching apps,” but they’re built for opposite habits.

The core difference.

Facet — browse

A full visual grid of your apps with folders, pages, and Launchpad layout import. Open, scan, click. Built for people who recognize apps by icon and position, not exact name.

Alfred — automate

A keyboard search bar plus the Powerpack: workflows, text snippets, clipboard history, and deep macOS automation. Built for keyboard-first power users who type everything.

Feature comparison.

NeedFacetAlfred
CategoryVisual app grid (Launchpad-style)Keyboard launcher + automation
Visual app gridYes — the core of the appNo — search bar only
Folders & pagesYes, with Launchpad importNo spatial layout
Keyboard searchYes, search and launchYes — its whole interface
Workflows & automationNot the focusPowerpack workflows, snippets, clipboard
Pricing$14.99 one-timeFree core; Powerpack one-time (£34+ / ~$43+)
Learning curveMinimal — open and browseHigher for workflows
Best fitPeople who want Launchpad backKeyboard power users who automate

Pricing reflects each vendor’s published model at time of writing: Alfred’s core is free with a one-time Powerpack (Single License around £34, Mega Supporter around £59, per alfredapp.com/shop); Facet is a single $14.99 purchase. Check the vendor sites for current pricing.

Pricing: both one-time, very different scope.

Both avoid subscriptions, which is refreshing — but they’re priced for different things. Alfred’s Powerpack (roughly $43–$74 depending on tier) buys a deep automation platform. Facet’s $14.99 buys one focused thing done well: the Launchpad grid back, with folders and import. If you only want app browsing, paying for Alfred’s automation engine is more than you need; if you want workflows and snippets, Facet doesn’t try to offer them.

Which should you choose?

Choose Facet if

You miss the Launchpad grid, keep apps in folders, and want a simple, paid-once visual launcher with almost no learning curve.

Choose Alfred if

You live on the keyboard and want workflows, snippets, clipboard history, and macOS automation more than a visual app grid.

Use both if

Alfred for keyboard automation, Facet for the visual app grid Alfred was never meant to provide.

Related guides.