Spotlight — search
Built into macOS and free. Press ⌘ Space, type, and it searches apps, files, and actions. In Tahoe it also shows an Apps view (⌘1) — an alphabetical, auto-categorized list. Great when you know the name.
In macOS 26 (Tahoe), Spotlight became the app launcher — its Applications view replaced Launchpad. But Spotlight is search-first: no custom folders, no pages, no saved layout. Facet keeps what Spotlight dropped — the visual grid you browse and organize. Here’s the honest side-by-side.
Built into macOS and free. Press ⌘ Space, type, and it searches apps, files, and actions. In Tahoe it also shows an Apps view (⌘1) — an alphabetical, auto-categorized list. Great when you know the name.
A full visual grid of your apps with custom folders, pages, and Launchpad layout import. Open, scan, click. Great when you recognize an app by icon or where you put it — not its exact name.
| Need | Facet | Spotlight (Tahoe) |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Visual app grid (Launchpad-style) | System search + Apps view |
| Visual app grid | Yes — full grid | Apps view is a list/grid, search-first |
| Custom folders | Yes | No — auto categories only |
| Custom pages & order | Yes, drag to arrange | No manual reordering |
| Saved layout | Yes, remembered | No saved layout |
| Launchpad layout import | Yes | No |
| Typed search | Yes, search & launch | Yes — system-wide |
| File & web search | Apps focus | Yes — its strength |
| Price | $14.99 one-time | Free, built in |
| Best fit | Visual browsing & organization | Typed search across the system |
Based on macOS Tahoe (macOS 26) behavior: Spotlight gained Browse Modes including an Applications view (⌘1) that replaced Launchpad. Sources: Apple Support — Browse Modes in Spotlight; Apple Newsroom (macOS Tahoe 26, June 2025).
Spotlight is excellent at what it does — typed search across apps, files, and actions. But the Apps view that replaced Launchpad is a search-first floating list. It auto-sorts apps alphabetically into fixed categories, and that’s it: you can’t make custom folders, can’t build pages, can’t drag icons into the order you want, and it doesn’t remember a layout. The spatial memory that made Launchpad fast — “my design tools are on page 2, bottom-left” — has no equivalent in Spotlight.
Facet fills exactly that gap. It keeps Spotlight’s search habit available, but adds back the browse-first grid: custom folders, pages, a layout that stays put, and a one-time import of your old Launchpad arrangement so you don’t rebuild from scratch.
You launch apps by typing their name, and you mostly want fast system-wide search for files, apps, and actions — at no cost.
You miss the Launchpad grid, organize apps into folders, and want a visual launcher with a layout you control.
Spotlight for typed search, Facet for the visual app grid. They don’t conflict — they cover the two halves of launching.