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Safari can now watch a webpage and alert you when it changes

Safari’s new Notify Me feature can watch a webpage for changes and send an alert when something relevant happens.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jun 9, 2026, 3:30 AM EDT
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MacBook displaying Safari on macOS 27 Golden Gate with a new 'Notify Me' feature. A dialog box allows users to create a webpage alert by entering a condition such as 'When registration opens,' enabling Safari to monitor the site and notify the user when relevant content changes.
Image: Apple
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Safari just quietly picked up a superpower that a lot of us have been faking with hacks and extensions for years: it can now watch a page for you and tap you on the shoulder the moment something important changes. In macOS 27 and iOS 27, Apple is baking this directly into the browser with a feature called “Notify Me,” and it has the potential to change how we track restocks, deals, tickets, and even news.

At a basic level, Notify Me does exactly what the name suggests: you point Safari at a particular page, tell it what you care about, and it keeps coming back in the background until it spots a relevant change, then sends you a notification. Think of a product that’s always sold out, a concert that’s about to sell out, or a volatile price on an airline’s site – instead of obsessively refreshing, Safari now does the repetitive work for you. Apple and early coverage have been leaning into the obvious examples like product restocks, ticket availability, and price drops, but really, this feature applies to almost any page where “something changed” matters more than “what’s on the page right now.”

What makes it more interesting than a simple auto-refresh is the way Apple is tying it into natural language and its broader “Apple Intelligence” push. You aren’t just saying “tell me if this page changes,” you can describe the condition you care about: a certain price threshold, a keyword appearing, a restock message showing up again. Under the hood, Safari’s AI agent parses the page, understands its components, and checks whether the latest version matches your instruction before deciding to ping you. The company has been very clear that this is a “safe” agent: it visits pages and analyzes content, but it does not go ahead and take sensitive actions like completing purchases or filling forms behind your back.

If you’ve ever used web-monitoring tools like Distill Web Monitor, Visualping, or services like Wachete, the concept isn’t new. Those tools sit between you and the page, checking at intervals and sending alerts by email, SMS, or push when they see any change in the HTML or a selected element. Chrome users often rely on extensions that do this by constantly refreshing the page in the background, or they wire up automation through tools like HARPA AI to track prices, stock levels, or text changes. What Apple is doing with Notify Me is less about inventing page monitoring and more about mainstreaming it: taking a niche power-user behavior and making it feel like a native browser feature that regular people might actually try.

The integration angle is important. Because Notify Me is part of Safari, it inherits the system-level notification controls you already use on macOS and iOS. If alerts become noisy, you can manage them in the same Notifications settings panel where you tame app badges and banners, or tweak Safari’s own website notification preferences. Apple is also emphasizing privacy: rather than routing everything through a third-party service, monitoring is designed as an in-browser capability aligned with the company’s usual “on-device where possible” story. For users who are nervous about giving a random extension permission to read and change website data, a first-party approach is automatically more palatable.

Of course, Notify Me isn’t arriving in a vacuum. It’s part of a broader makeover of Safari for macOS 27 and iOS 27 that leans heavily on AI. Alongside page monitoring, Safari is gaining automatic tab organization that analyzes the content of your open sites and clusters them into topics, so all your travel planning tabs, for instance, sit together without you doing the manual grouping. There’s also a “Describe an Extension” feature that lets you request a custom Safari extension in plain language, and the browser will generate it to tweak the behavior or layout of certain pages for you. Tie these pieces together and you start to see Apple’s long-term intent: Safari is being positioned less as a passive window to the web and more as an active, opinionated assistant that can understand, organize, and now watch what you browse.

From a day-to-day user perspective, the most compelling thing about Notify Me is how low-friction it could make some very common internet rituals. For shoppers, it’s the obvious stuff: tracking when that out-of-stock gadget finally reappears, or when a price dips below a number you can live with, without leaving half a dozen tabs open for days. For fans trying to catch high-demand tickets, having the browser itself watching the event page and telling you the moment the status flips could be the difference between “got in” and “sold out again.” But the utility extends beyond commerce: following a government advisory page during a storm, tracking when a company quietly updates a policy, or seeing when a long-running blog finally posts a promised update all become easier if you can tell Safari, once, to keep an eye on it.

If you look at it through a competitive lens, Apple is also plugging a gap that other browsers have left mostly to third-party ecosystems. Chrome and Edge users are used to installing extensions for almost everything: ad blocking, tab management, content clipping, and yes, page monitoring. That flexibility is powerful, but it also means more moving parts, more privacy prompts, and more risk when an extension is sold or abandoned. By folding page monitoring into Safari itself and sitting it alongside AI tab grouping and one-tap password updates, Apple is opting for fewer knobs but tighter integration, aiming squarely at users who prefer curated capabilities over an anything-goes extension marketplace.

For Apple, Notify Me also dovetails neatly with its “Apple Intelligence” narrative from WWDC 2026. The company is keen to frame its AI as focused on utility over spectacle: instead of chatbots that can do everything, it is rolling out specific, contained agents that help with concrete tasks such as rewriting text, organizing tabs, building shortcuts, and now monitoring web pages. In that sense, Safari’s new watcher mode is another example of agentic AI in the background, automating a tedious workflow in ways that feel almost invisible until you miss them on another device. It’s also one of those features that could quietly become a habit: once you’ve used it a few times successfully, the idea of manually refreshing a “coming soon” page may start to feel strangely old-fashioned.

There are still open questions, of course. Apple has not publicly gone into exhaustive detail on how granular your conditions can be, how often Safari checks a page, or how it handles pages that require logins or heavy client-side rendering before the thing you care about even appears. In practice, Notify Me will probably handle straightforward, publicly accessible pages best – the kind of product and ticket sites Apple keeps highlighting in its own examples. Power users who are used to monitoring specific DOM elements, diffing HTML snapshots, or piping change events into complex workflows will likely still find a role for dedicated tools. But for a huge chunk of everyday scenarios, a native, one-click “watch this for me” inside Safari is going to be enough, and that alone is a significant step forward for the average user.

Safari’s Notify Me feature is expected to ship later this year as part of the macOS 27 and iOS 27 releases, alongside the broader Apple Intelligence rollout that will debut first for English-language users. In the U.S., where people routinely juggle multiple shopping sites, ticket portals, and government pages, having the browser quietly look out for key changes feels like a genuinely practical upgrade rather than just another shiny AI demo. For Apple, it’s another small but telling move toward a future where your browser is not just a place you visit websites, but a partner that remembers what you care about and lets you step away without feeling like you’re going to miss out.


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