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Best Cross-Platform Clipboard Managers: Which One Fits Your Devices?

There is no single "best" clipboard manager — there is a best one for your mix of devices. A tool that's perfect on a Mac-only desk falls apart the moment your other device runs Windows or Android. This comparison sorts the well-known options by the job they're actually built for, so you can pick in two minutes.

The Short Answer

ToolBuilt forPlatforms
OctoclipMixed-device setups: clipboard history + sync across iPhone, Android, Windows, and MaciOS, Android, Windows, macOS
PastePolished clipboard history inside the Apple ecosystemmacOS, iOS
MaccyMinimal, fast, open-source history on a single MacmacOS
DittoFree, powerful history on a single Windows PCWindows
CopyQScriptable power-user history on desktopsWindows, macOS, Linux
KDE ConnectFree, open-source device bridging (notifications, files, clipboard)Android, Linux, Windows, macOS (varies)

If all your devices wear the same logo, an ecosystem-native tool is a fine choice. The moment you cross ecosystems — Windows PC + iPhone, Mac + Android — the field narrows fast, and that's the gap Octoclip is built for.

Octoclip — Best for Mixed-Device Setups

Octoclip treats the cross-device case as the main event, not an add-on:

Honest limits: the Free plan keeps 24 hours of history and connects 1 Nearby Sync device — enough to test the cross-device flow, not enough to live on forever. Paid is a one-time purchase, not a subscription.

Paste — Best for Apple-Only Desks

Paste is a beautifully designed clipboard history app for macOS and iOS, with iCloud sync between Apple devices and a pinboard system many people love. If every device you own is made by Apple and you want the most native-feeling experience, Paste is a strong pick. It has historically used a subscription model (check its current App Store listing for pricing), and it stays inside the Apple ecosystem — there is no Windows or Android client.

Maccy — Best Free Minimal Mac History

Maccy is open source, fast, and deliberately simple: a searchable history behind a hotkey on your Mac, and that's the point. If you need history on one Mac and nothing else, it's hard to argue with. It doesn't try to be a sync tool.

Ditto — Best Free Windows History

Ditto is the long-standing free clipboard manager for Windows: deep history, search, paste formatting options. For a single Windows PC it remains excellent. Like Maccy, it's a single-platform tool by design.

CopyQ — Best for Desktop Power Users

CopyQ is open source and runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux, with tabs, editing, and scripting for people who want to program their clipboard. The trade-off is a utilitarian interface and a desktop-only worldview — phones aren't part of the picture.

KDE Connect — Best Free Device Bridge

KDE Connect is a free, open-source bridge between devices that includes clipboard sharing along with notifications and file transfer. It's a generous project and works well, particularly with Android and Linux. It's a device bridge rather than a clipboard manager — clipboard sharing is one of many bridge features, without the history search and reuse layer of a dedicated clipboard manager — and iPhone support is more limited than the rest.

How to Choose

  1. All-Apple? Paste (premium feel) or Maccy (free, minimal).
  2. One Windows PC? Ditto, free and proven.
  3. Desktop tinkerer? CopyQ.
  4. Phone + computer from different ecosystems? This is the cross-platform case in earnest: you want history and sync and mobile clients. Octoclip is built exactly for this — see how to copy and paste between devices for what that workflow looks like in practice.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a cross-platform clipboard manager?

A clipboard manager that runs on more than one operating system and syncs your clipboard between them — so something you copy on your phone is ready to paste on your computer, and vice versa. Single-platform tools keep history on one device; cross-platform ones make the clipboard follow you.

Are free clipboard managers safe for passwords?

Any clipboard tool sees what you copy — that's the job — so prefer tools that are transparent about where data goes. Local-only tools (Maccy, Ditto, CopyQ) keep everything on-device. For sync, prefer designs where you control the storage and content is encrypted before it leaves the device, as Octoclip does with WebDAV / S3 Cloud Sync.

Do I really need sync, or just history?

If you work on one device, history alone is plenty — pick the native tool for your OS. The moment you regularly move text between two devices (verification codes, links, snippets), sync stops being a luxury; emailing yourself links is the tax you're currently paying.