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MS Paint for Mac: The Closest Equivalents

Switched from Windows and reaching for Microsoft Paint? It is not here, and it never was. But the thing you actually want, a small app that opens instantly and lets you draw, crop, and label an image, absolutely exists on macOS. Here are the closest equivalents, honestly ranked.

Short version: there is no official MS Paint for Mac. The closest native equivalent is the free Paint Vlix (familiar toolbar, plus editable objects and unlimited undo). Preview is the built-in fallback for quick markup, and jspaint.app is a browser clone if you want the exact retro look for one job. Download Paint Vlix free on the Mac App Store

Why there is no Microsoft Paint for Mac

Microsoft Paint has shipped with Windows for decades, but Microsoft has never released a Mac version, and it is not on the Mac App Store. So when people search for "MS Paint for Mac" they are really asking a different question: what is the app for Mac like Paint? The good news is that the answer is better than the original.

The easiest answer: Paint Vlix (free, native)

Paint Vlix is a free Mac app built natively in Swift, so it opens instantly. You get the pencil, brush, shapes, lines, arrows, and text you remember, plus the two things MS Paint never had: every mark stays an editable object, and undo is unlimited.

Paint Vlix on macOS with a familiar toolbar, drawing shapes, arrows, and text on an image
The familiar Paint toolbar, on macOS. Shapes, arrows, and text, all still editable after you place them.

It is 100% free on the Mac App Store, with no in-app purchases, no subscription, and no account.

Download Paint Vlix free on the Mac App Store

The Microsoft Paint alternatives for Mac, ranked

Every option below is genuinely free. They differ in what they are for, which matters far more than a feature count.

Best overall

1. Paint Vlix (free, native)

The closest thing to MS Paint that is actually built for macOS. You get the simple, familiar toolbar, but drawings stay as objects you can move and restyle instead of pixels that vanish the moment you click away. Built natively in Swift so it opens instantly, exports PNG, JPEG, BMP, or TIFF, and never asks you to sign in. This is the pick for most people who just want Paint back.

Built in

2. Preview (already on your Mac)

Preview's Markup toolbar covers the basics: shapes, arrows, text, a sketch tool, and cropping. If your need is a one-off annotation and you do not want to install anything, it is right there. The limit is that it is a viewer with markup bolted on, not a drawing app, and everything bakes into the image on save.

Browser

3. JS Paint (web clone)

The site jspaint.app recreates classic MS Paint faithfully, right down to the retro look, and runs in any browser with nothing to install. Perfect for nostalgia or a single quick doodle. It is a web page, though, so it is less convenient for files you work with often, and it is not a native Mac app.

Heavy duty

4. GIMP (free, powerful, complex)

GIMP is a free, full photo editor with layers, masks, and filters. It can do far more than Paint, which is exactly the problem if you only wanted Paint: it is a big download with a steep learning curve. Reach for it when you have outgrown a simple paint app, not before.

What about Paint.NET, Paint X, and Paintbrush?

A few names come up in the same searches, so to save you the trip:

Paint Vlix vs Microsoft Paint

If Paint Vlix is going to be your MS Paint, here is how the two line up. It keeps everything you used Paint for, and adds what Paint never had.

What you want to doPaint VlixMicrosoft Paint
Classic pencil, brush, shapes & text
Runs natively on macOSWindows only
Editable objects you can move laterPixels only
Unlimited undo and redoLimited
Rich text with fonts, outline & shadowBasic text
Rotate to any angle90° steps only
Brightness, contrast & opacityLimited
Export PNG, JPEG, BMP, TIFF
Free

So which MS Paint equivalent should you pick?