How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac

Spotlight can be used to search both the local disk and computer simultaneously on your Mac. Spotlight is launched from the magnifying glass icon in the top menu bar and will display predictive results as you type. You can use Spotlight to...

Method 1 of 3:

Getting Started With Spotlight

  1. Picture 1 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Click the magnifying glass icon. This is located in the upper right corner of the menu bar. Spotlight will open in the center of the screen.
    1. You can also use the keyboard shortcut Cmd+Space to open spotlight from any other screen.
  2. Picture 2 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Begin typing. The spotlight search field is selected by default when it is opened. Related search results will automatically appear as you type.
    1. Spotlight will search both the local hard disk and the web (if connected to the internet).
  3. Picture 3 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Browse the results. You can use the mouse pointer or arrow keys to preview search results. Single-clicking or selecting a search result will display a preview in the area to the right.
  4. Picture 4 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Open a search result. Double-click or hit Return on a selected search result to open it.
Method 2 of 3:

Doing More With Spotlight

  1. Picture 5 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Search and launch Applications. Enter an application name and hit Return on the result to launch an application directly from Spotlight.
    1. The application must already be installed to your hard disk.
    2. Predictive text will often allow you to launch an application before typing the entire name.
  2. Picture 6 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Search files and documents. Relevant search terms will return results for locally stored media (images, video, music), document types, email, calendar, or file tags.
    1. If you are looking for a certain phrase or subject in an email, Spotlight can match word strings in its results.
    2. You can search for images by their name, filetype (e.g. .jpg), or even ID tags. Look the for the 'Images' option in the search results.
  3. Picture 7 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Search the web. Spotlight uses Bing search and location tagging to return searches from wikipedia, maps, or relevant websites.
    1. The search engine used by Spotlight cannot be changed.
  4. Picture 8 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Perform basic calculations. Enter simple math functions or unit conversions (e.g. 100mm to inches) and see the result in Spotlight without having to navigate to any webpage.
  5. Picture 9 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Look up word definitions. When entering a word, look for the 'Look up' option within the list of results. This will give you a dictionary definition of the word without ever having to leave the Spotlight interface.[1]
Method 3 of 3:

Editing Spotlight Settings

  1. Picture 10 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Open System Preferences. Open the Apple menu in the upper left and select 'System Preferences'.
  2. Picture 11 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Click 'Spotlight'. This will take you to the Spotlight settings page.
  3. Picture 12 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Click the 'Search Results' tab. You will see a list of categories used by Spotlight search.
  4. Picture 13 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Reorder search results. Click and drag to reorder the categories. They will appear in order from top to bottom in your Spotlight searches (if there are relevant results)
  5. Picture 14 of How to Search on Spotlight on a Mac
    Filter out results. Deselect a checkbox to have Spotlight stop searching that category or area of your computer.
    1. Disable 'Spotlight Suggestions' to stop Spotlight from including features such as news or app store results in your Spotlight search.
    2. Disable 'Bing Results' to stop web search entirely. Spotlight will only search and return results for the local hard disk.
Update 04 March 2020
Category

System

Mac OS X

Hardware

Game

Tech info

Technology

Science

Life

Application

Electric

Program

Mobile