macOS Sequoia is finally out inpublic beta, letting anyone install, test, and provide feedback on pre-released features before becoming publicly available this fall. In addition toApple Intelligence, macOS Sequoia brings several awesomenew featuresthat I’m having fun testing and can’t wait to see officially released.

Window tiling is one feature that particularly interested me. I’m a long-time user ofMagnet, having purchased it from the Mac App Store years ago. Magnet is a popular window manager that allows quick and easy window placement by dragging to certain trigger areas or with keyboard shortcuts. Window management is a significant feature for people looking to streamline their macOS experience by quickly placing windows side-by-side, full-screen, and any other placement combinations.

mac os sequioa iphone 15 pro max mirroring demo

Apple calls window management window tiling, and it’s enabled by default upon installing macOS Sequoia. After Microsoft Windows had this feature for years, Apple finally released something similar with macOS Sequoia. In fact, I wrote a comparison piece to see ifmacOS’s native window tiling can replace Magnet. Let’s look deeper at window tiling in macOS Sequoia and how you can create and customize window tiling keyboard shortcuts.

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How to use window tiling in macOS Sequoia

The green button

When using any app in macOS, hover the pointer over the green button in the top left corner, also called the full-screen button. A menu will appear with four options underMove & Resizeand another four underFill & Arrange.

When selecting a placement option underMove & Resize, the currently selected window adjusts half of the display, whether that be the top, bottom, left, or right half. Selecting an option underFill & Arrangecan rearrange the selected app to take up the entire display or place multiple apps side-by-side, one-half and two quadrants, or four quadrants.

Window management with macOS 15 using the full screen button.

Dragging and Option key

The second way to rearrange windows in macOS Sequoia is by selecting a window, holding down the option key, or dragging the window to the side of your display. There are three placements this method works with: left half, right half, and fill the entire display. Either drag your selected window to the left, right, or top of your display to resize the window or hold down the option key while dragging to activate the window tiling feature.

Releasing the window will resize it. You can turn off window tiling by dragging windows to the edge of the screen or holding down the option key by navigating toSystem Settings>Desktop & Dock>Scroll down to Windows> Toggle off one or both options.

Dragging a window to activate window tiling in macOS 15.

Keyboard shortcuts

The third and final way to resize windows with window tiling is by using keyboard shortcuts. Keyboard shortcuts mean the selected window will resize by holding down a specific combination of keys. To easily see keyboard shortcuts available in macOS Sequoia, click Window in the menu bar. The available shortcuts show in a light grey to the right of your different options like Fill and Center. More options are underMove & ResizeandFull Screen Tile. You can also select the option from the Window dropdown menu to resize the window.

These are the keyboard shortcuts available by default:

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How to create and customize window tiling keyboard shortcuts

It’s very easy

You may want to customize window tiling keyboard shortcuts to either match keyboard commands you currently use with a window management app, like Magnet, or to create more shortcuts for tiling options without one, like for each of the four quadrants. To create or customize a keyboard shortcut for window tiling, navigate toSystem Settings>Keyboard>Keyboard Shortcuts>App Shortcuts> press the plus (+) icon. Under Menu title, enter the name of the tiling action found under the Window menu in the menu bar.

For example, if you want to change the command for resizing an app to take up the entire screen, enter Fill. Alternatively, to create a shortcut for one or more quadrants, you’ll enter Top Left, Top Right, Bottom Left, or Bottom Right. Within Keyboard shortcut enter your keyboard command by holding down your selected keys. Remember, this shouldn’t be a shortcut used by any other macOS service. Otherwise, the shortcut will keep its default mapping for that command within particular apps. Click Done when finished. Repeat these actions for every shortcut you want to add or change. You may need to click the chevron to the left of All Applications to view your shortcuts.

The Window dropdown from the macOS 15 menu bar for Safari.

One final pro tip. By default, windows have margins to provide a little space between them. Personally, I don’t care for the margins. To turn them off, navigate toSystem Settings>Desktop & Dock>Scroll down to Windows> Toggle offTitled windows have margins.

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