To do a screenshot on a Mac, use simple keyboard shortcuts: the most common are Shift + Command + 3 for the entire screen and Shift + Command + 4 for a selected area.

How to Do a Screenshot on Mac

Fast keyboard shortcuts

  • Entire screen
    • Press Shift + Command (⌘) + 3.
    • macOS captures everything on your current display and saves it as a PNG file (usually to your Desktop by default).
  • Selected area
    • Press Shift + Command (⌘) + 4.
    • Your cursor turns into a crosshair; click and drag to select the area you want, then release to capture.
  • Specific window
    • Press Shift + Command (⌘) + 4 , then tap Space.
    • Cursor becomes a camera; click on the window you want to capture.
  • Screenshot toolbar (more options)
    • Press Shift + Command (⌘) + 5 to open the Screenshot toolbar.
    • You can choose entire screen, window, or selection, set a timer, and pick where to save the screenshot.
  • Touch Bar (if your Mac has one)
    • Press Shift + Command (⌘) + 6 to capture the Touch Bar contents.

Where screenshots go & quick editing

  • By default, screenshots are usually saved to your Desktop with names like “Screen Shot 2026-01-20 at 08.45.00 AM.png”.
  • After capturing, a small floating thumbnail may appear in the bottom-right corner:
    • Click it to quickly crop, draw, add text, or shapes using Markup tools.
    • If you ignore it, it disappears and the file stays saved where macOS is configured to put screenshots.

Other ways to screenshot on Mac

  • Preview app method
    • Open Preview → in the menu bar click File → choose Take Screenshot (from Selection, Window, or Entire Screen).
    • Preview lets you annotate, crop, and then save or export in different formats.
  • Older utility apps (like Grab)
    • Some guides still mention tools like Grab, which allow choosing the type of capture and then manually saving the image.

Mini tips and “pro” habits

  • Prefer window or partial screenshots instead of full screen to keep things clean and readable.
  • Rename screenshots with meaningful names (e.g., “bug-report-login.png”) so you can find them easily later.
  • Use Markup or Preview to add arrows, text, and highlights when you’re explaining steps or reporting a bug.

Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.