How to declutter your Mac's menu bar

Bartender’s preferences window
Image credit: MacFormat, Surtees Studios

The right end of a Mac’s menu bar can get crowded, making icons hard to find and allowing status changes to go unnoticed. This is where Bartender 3 ($15, £15, AU$24) is useful.

Its purpose is to declutter and rearrange the menu bar icons to your needs, providing you with the option to hide and reveal them as and when you want.

Let’s get down to giving your menu bar an unseasonally early spring clean! After you install the app, you’ll eventually close its preferences window. To get back to it, Option-click the app’s menu bar icon or, if you choose to hide Bartender’s own icon, open the app from Finder.

Bartender’s general preferences

Image credit: MacFormat

A quick tour of Bartender’s preferences

1. Tailor each icon

Set visibility and searchable names for icons in the Menu Items tab. So, when using Bartender’s keyboard-based search feature, you may want to type ‘wifi’, not the default ‘AirPort’, to reveal the corresponding icon.

2. Keep it around

Bartender doesn’t open at login by default. It’s wise to alter that, so your icon arrangement kicks in whenever you use your Mac. The option for this is in the General tab.

3. Bartender’s own icon

You can pick from a range of premade designs, add your own, or wholly hide Bartender’s icon from the Appearance tab. Note that Bartender’s hot keys will still work, and you can easily open its preferences from Finder. 

4. Refresh rate

To save battery power, reduce the frequency at which Bartender checks for status updates that will change the visibility of icons. This is done in the Advanced tab.

Customize the icons

Using Bartender to choose whether an app’s menu bar icon is shown or hidden.

Image credit: MacFormat, Surtees Studios
Hot keys

Set shortcuts for controlling Bartender using the keyboard in the Hot Keys tab of the app’s preferences.

Bartender’s ‘hot keys’ are simply keyboard shortcuts used to control it: to toggle icon visibility, search for a status icon by typing its name, and navigate using the keyboard.

Set them in the Hot Keys tab in its preferences. Ensure you use combos not already used by other apps.

Click Bartender in the menu bar and it’ll toggle the icons that are visible in that area between two states: those whose visibility is set to Show and those set to Hide. The latter category is a good choice for icons you need only occasionally.

There are some exceptions. Set an icon to Always Show and it’ll be visible regardless of Bartender’s state.

Pick Always Hide and the icon will appear only if you: press the Search hot key and type its name; press the Show All Items hot key; or set the icon to display when it has a status update to tell you about.

When icons that are set to Hidden are currently shown, they’ll hide again when you switch app. You might turn that off (in Bartender’s General preferences) to co-opt the two visibility states so each contains icons related to different tasks.

No matter which visibility setting you pick, ticking ‘Show for updates’ will cause the icon to reappear for a limited time if a change in its status is detected.

Tools that sync to cloud storage are a good choice for this, to alert you if their connection drops.

Using Bartender to set visibility of an app’s menu bar icon.

Image credit: MacFormat, Surtees Studios

To rearrange the status icons, hold Command, then drag icons left or right. macOS itself allows this, though not for all items. You should find more are movable (with the exception of Notification Center) while Bartender is running.

You can rearrange some menu bar icons even with Bartender by holding Command and dragging them. With Bartender, more of them are movable.

Image credit: MacFormat, Surtees Studios

Note that even those icons you’ve set to Always Hide will appear if you press Bartender’s Show All Items hot key.

To reset an icon to its default behaviour, select it in the Menu Items tab of Bartender’s preferences and click the (unintuitive) minus icon below the list.

For more help with your Mac…

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This article was originally published in MacFormat #335 and Mac|Life #152. Get regular features, how-tos and reviews for Apple kit by subscribing to MacFormat in the UK or Mac|Life in North America. Subscriptions are also available worldwide.

Daryl Baxter
Software & Downloads Writer

Daryl had been freelancing for 3 years before joining TechRadar, now reporting on everything software-related. In his spare time, he's written a book, 'The Making of Tomb Raider'. His second book, '50 Years of Boss Fights', came out in 2024, with a third book coming in 2025. He also has a newsletter called 'Springboard'. He's usually found playing games old and new on his Steam Deck, Nintendo Switch, and MacBook Pro. If you have a story about an updated app, one that's about to launch, or just anything Software-related, drop him a line.