Battery Indicator

Remaining battery time in your menu bar

Battery Indicator lets you quickly glance the remaining battery time or percentage right in your menu bar.


Frequently Asked Questions

I have a feature request, bug report, or some feedback

Send it here.

The app does not show up in the menu bar

macOS hides menu bar apps when there is no space left in the menu bar. This is a common problem on MacBooks with a notch. Try quitting some other menu bar apps to free up space. If this does not solve it, try quitting Bartender if you have it installed.

You may also have enabled the “Hide while on power” preference, which hides the menu bar icon while the power adapter is connected. Launch the app again to reveal the menu bar item for 5 seconds or disconnect the power adapter.

The menu bar icon is vertically stretched when shown on a secondary display

This is a macOS 11 bug. I have tried to work around this issue, but it’s out of my control.

Why does the menu bar icon show when I unplug the power adapter?

The system needs some time to accurately calculate the time remaining estimate.

How do I remove the system battery menu bar item?

Drag it out of the menu bar while pressing Command.

Can it show “apps using significant energy” like the built-in battery indicator?

It can unfortunately not show this because of restrictions (sandboxing) imposed on apps on the App Store. However, you could change the menu bar item type to text instead of the icon and use this app in combination with the system battery indicator.

Can it play a sound when the battery is charged a certain percentage?

The app has a built-in sound when showing notifications. However, if you want a different sound, you can disable the default notification sound in the “Notification Settings” and then follow the below steps.

This is a perfect use case for the built-in Shortcuts app. You can use the Play Sound action to play the sound you want. To run the shortcut when the battery is at a certain percentage, you need the Shortery app. Use its “Power Status” trigger.

(The Shortery app is only a temporary requirement. It’s likely that Apple will introduce automation for Shortcuts in macOS 15.)

You can find sound effects here.

Can the battery icon hide when the battery is charged a certain percentage?

This is a perfect use case for the built-in Shortcuts app. Create a shortcut that quits the app and one that launches it. To run the shortcut when the battery is at a certain percentage, you need the Shortery app. Use its “Power Status” trigger.

(The Shortery app is only a temporary requirement. It’s likely that Apple will introduce automation for Shortcuts in macOS 15.)

How can I export, import, sync, or back up the settings?

See this guide.

Where can I find the changelog?

Go here and click “Version History”.

Can you localize the app into my language?

I don’t plan to localize the app.

More FAQs…


Older Versions

These are free for everyone but they will not run on newer macOS versions.