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What is Raycast and why everyone’s using it

Raycast turns a simple keyboard shortcut into a command center that launches apps, searches files, triggers AI, and runs workflows in seconds.

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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Apr 4, 2026, 10:47 AM EDT
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Dark-themed Raycast launcher window showing a search bar at the top, an upcoming team meeting calendar event, a list of favorite commands like Search Issues and My Schedule, and suggested items including AI Chat, Visual Studio Code, and Clipboard History floating over a blurred pink gradient background.
Image: Raycast
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Raycast is a keyboard-first launcher and productivity layer for your computer that tries to turn the simple act of “press shortcut, type, hit enter” into the control panel for your entire workday. Think of it as Spotlight or Windows Search on steroids, with deep integrations, AI built in, and a growing ecosystem of extensions that quietly replace a bunch of separate apps.

So, what exactly is Raycast?

At its core, Raycast is a small bar that pops up with a global keyboard shortcut and lets you do almost anything: open apps, search files, run shortcuts, control music, manage windows, check your calendar, or ask an AI a question—without ever touching the mouse. It started as a macOS launcher but now also has a Windows app in beta, aiming to be “your shortcut to everything” across platforms.

Instead of hunting through dock icons or menus, you hit a key combo, type a few letters, and Raycast figures out what you want—often faster than the OS itself. Over time, it learns your habits, so the things you do every day surface in a couple of keystrokes.

Key features in real-world use

Here’s what Raycast actually does once you install it:

  • App launcher: Open apps, system settings, or websites just by typing their name, similar to Spotlight or Alfred but with more polish and built‑in features.
  • File and web search: Quickly search local files, bookmarks, browser history, or fire off a Google query without opening a browser first.
  • Clipboard history: View everything you copied recently—text, links, images—and paste or reuse it from a searchable list.
  • Snippets and text expansion: Save canned responses, addresses, boilerplate emails, and drop them into any app with a short keyword.
  • Window management: Snap windows to halves, thirds, or quadrants of the screen with commands instead of dragging them around.
  • Calendar and reminders: Peek at your schedule, join Zoom calls, or add tasks without diving into your calendar app.
  • Utilities: Calculator, unit converter, emoji picker, translation, flight tracking, screenshot text search, and more, all surfaced through the same launcher.

Much of this replaces little standalone apps—clipboard tools, window managers, text expanders—with one consistent interface triggered from your keyboard.

The AI layer on your desktop

One of the big shifts in recent years is Raycast’s push into AI. Raycast AI lives directly in the launcher, so instead of opening a browser tab to talk to a chatbot, you hit your Raycast shortcut and ask away.

Dark-mode Raycast AI chat window centered on screen, displaying a question about making proper carbonara and a multi-step recipe answer, with Quick AI and paste-to-Notion actions below, layered over a blurred MacBook announcement document and pink gradient wallpaper.
Image: Raycast
  • Quick AI: A lightweight panel for “answer this question” moments—definitions, explanations, code help, email rewrites, summaries—without switching context.
  • AI Chat: A more full-featured chat view for back-and-forth help with writing, coding, or brainstorming, including support for different models and file context.
  • AI Commands: Reusable actions like “Improve writing”, “Explain code”, or “Summarize webpage” that you can trigger on selected text, files, or clipboard content.

For many users, this turns Raycast into an “AI-native OS layer”: the place where you ask quick questions, clean up text, or get code explanations without ever breaking your flow.

Extensions: where it stops feeling like “just a launcher”

The real hook is the extension ecosystem—Raycast has its own “Store” full of integrations built by both the company and the community.

Dark-themed Raycast Extension Store panel featuring a search bar and a list of featured and trending extensions such as Visual Studio Code, CleanShot X, Figma File Search, GitHub, and Spotify Player, with install stats and icons on the right, set against a soft pink gradient background.
Image: Raycast

You can plug in tools you already use every day, such as:

  • Productivity and project tools: Notion, Linear, Jira, Todoist, Trello-style apps, so you can search and create issues or tasks from the launcher.
  • Collaboration and comms: Slack, Zoom, Google Meet, where you can join calls, set your status, or jump to conversations.
  • Developer tooling: GitHub, VS Code, script commands, package managers—ideal for developers who live in terminals and editors.
  • Everyday services: Spotify, Google Translate, TinyPNG, password managers like 1Password, browsers like Arc or Chrome.

Developers can write their own extensions using React, TypeScript, and Node, then publish them to the store, which is why the catalog keeps expanding. For teams, it also means internal tools—scripts, dashboards, internal docs—can be wrapped in a friendly Raycast command instead of sending people raw URLs or CLI instructions.

How it compares to Spotlight and Alfred

If you’re familiar with macOS Spotlight or Alfred, Raycast sits in the same category but tries to be more opinionated and modern out of the box.

AspectSpotlightAlfredRaycast
Core roleSystem searchPower-user launcherLauncher + productivity hub
PlatformmacOSmacOSmacOS, Windows (beta)
Extensions / workflowsLimitedExtensive (Powerpack)Large Store, easy to browse and install
Built-in utilitiesBasic search, calculatorMany via workflowsClipboard, snippets, windows, notes, etc.
AI integrationNoneVia external scriptsDeeply integrated AI & AI commands
Pricing modelFreeFree + paid PowerpackGenerous free tier + Pro subscription

Spotlight is free and simple, but doesn’t aim to automate your life. Alfred is extremely powerful, especially with custom workflows, but some of the more advanced features sit behind a one-time “Powerpack” purchase. Raycast takes a different approach: it ships a lot of those “power features” in the free tier, then charges a subscription for more advanced AI and team features.

Who actually benefits from Raycast?

Raycast tends to click with people who live on their machines all day: developers, designers, writers, product folks, and heavy knowledge workers. If you’re already the sort of person who reaches for the keyboard over the mouse and enjoys shaving seconds off repetitive tasks, it can become the app you invoke hundreds of times a day.

Common use cases include:

  • Developers jumping between repos, issues, docs, scripts, and terminals.
  • Designers opening Figma files, reviewing feedback, and grabbing assets quickly.
  • Content creators and PMs juggling calendars, notes, links, and messages while asking AI to polish text or summarize long docs on the fly.

For more casual users, it might feel like overkill at first, but even then, simple wins like a smarter launcher, clipboard history, and snippets can quietly replace several single-purpose tools.

Pricing, Pro features, and the Windows story

Raycast is free to download and use, with most of its core launcher and productivity features available at no cost. The Raycast Pro subscription unlocks extras like stronger AI features, more generous usage, cloud sync options, and collaborative/team capabilities.

Originally, Raycast was Mac-only and built a reputation there, but it now offers a Windows app in beta, bringing the same keyboard-first philosophy and extensions to Microsoft’s platform. Early coverage notes that it can make Windows feel snappier and more cohesive, especially around file management and navigation, which are common pain points.


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