Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Features

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Dot is the Mac calendar app I wish I had found sooner in 2026

The $9.99 app that replaced my $60 calendar subscription.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Mac running dot caledar app
Rachit Agarwal / Digital Trends

I always loved menu bar calendar apps. They let me check upcoming events, add events quickly, and access my calendar without switching apps. It’s one of those small quality-of-life improvements that, once you experience it, you can’t go back from.

My menu bar calendar journey started with Fantastical. It’s one of the best calendar apps on Mac, period. But when Flexibits moved to a subscription model, I couldn’t justify paying for features I wasn’t using. So I moved on.

Recommended Videos

I then switched to Dato, which is a solid app and served me well for a long time. But it lacks some features, and again, the pricing didn’t feel right. I needed something modern, cleaner, and more affordable. That’s when I discovered Dot.

Is Dot actually worth switching to?

Dot is a menu bar-only Mac calendar app, and it does exactly what it promises without any bloat. It works with iCloud, Google, Outlook, and Exchange by reading directly from your Mac’s built-in Calendar app, so there’s no separate account to create or sign into.

The interface is clean and looks beautiful. At the top, you get a quick glance at today’s event count, the day and date, and a settings icon. You can also add a Day and Year progress bar, which shows how much time is left before the end of the day or year. 

Below that, there’s a month view with small dots marking days that have events scheduled, which makes it easy to spot busy days at a glance. Scroll further and you get a full list of upcoming events.

Adding events is fast and supports natural language input. You can type something like “publish Dot’s review at 11:30 am” or “meeting with Sara at 2 PM” and Dot figures out the rest. You can also jump to any date by pressing F and typing it in, which is a small but genuinely useful touch.

What makes Dot stand out?

A few features make Dot feel more considered than its competition. The first is the customizability. You can change the accent color, choose what information appears in the calendar, and how the calendar appears in the Menu Bar. 

Meeting prep is another feature I like a lot. When you have a video call scheduled, Dot automatically surfaces links from your invite, so you are not digging through your email five minutes before the call. It also supports one-click joining for Zoom, Google Meet, Teams, and Webex, along with a camera and mic preview so you can check your setup before jumping in.

The Command Bar is another highlight, and a feature I have not seen in any other calendar app. With a single shortcut, I can create events, search my schedule, check world clocks, or copy my day’s agenda without leaving whatever I am doing.

Dot also lets you mark special dates on your calendar by right-clicking any day, giving it a title and a color, and it shows up highlighted with the label on hover. It’s a simple feature, but surprisingly useful for flagging things like deadlines, paydays, or trips.

And these are just some of the features. Dot is one of my favorite Mac apps I discovered in 2026, and I highly recommend you use its 14-day trial to explore the app and check it out for yourself by visiting trydot.app

If you are happy with it, you can purchase it for a one-time price of $14.99 (currently $9.99 with the launch code). There’s no subscription and no account required, and your data stays on your Mac. For anyone tired of paying monthly for a calendar app, Dot is the answer.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over seven years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
Microsoft says it’s prepping a fix for Outlook bug that blanked out documents
The bug hit Office documents opened from OneDrive and SharePoint links in classic Outlook
how to delete a user on a Mac

Microsoft says it has started releasing a service-side update for a classic Outlook bug that caused Office files to load blank, show repair prompts, or trigger corruption warnings.

The Outlook documents problem affects Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files opened through OneDrive and SharePoint links in classic Outlook. For workers who live in Microsoft 365, the bigger headache isn’t only the blank screen. It’s the uncertainty Outlook creates when a file that may be fine suddenly looks broken.

Read more
This PC is big enough to live in and has it’s own AC for cooling the giant internals
A room-sized RGB PC makes one thing clear, even imaginary giant components still need serious cooling.
Person, Performer, Shop

A Chinese creator has built a walk-in PC that turns desktop cooling into a human-scale spectacle. The fish-tank-style tower has enough room for a person, a compact desk, and a gaming setup, making the creator look like one of the tiny figures builders sometimes place inside flashy cases.

The build comes from TechTuber Soda Baka, who shared the project on Bilibili. It scales up familiar PC modding cues, including wall-sized fan housings, a huge graphics card prop, chunky cooler parts, and plenty of RGB lighting.

Read more
AI chatbots continue feeding into our worst delusions, finds worrying report on ChatGPT and Grok
AI companions may be making mental health crises even worse
Grok

AI chatbots were meant to help answer your questions, maybe summarize questions, and even help you with your emails. But the darker problem is what happens when people start trusting it like an actual companion. A new report highlights several cases where users say chatbot conversations are feeding into their delusional thinking.

ChatGPT and Grok were both often named in the report. BBC spoke to 14 people who spiraled into delusions while using AI, including one case where a Grok user believed people from xAI were coming to kill him, and another where a ChatGPT user’s wife said his personality changed before he attacked her.

Read more