Home Apple Cats Lock Is a Tiny Mac App Built for Keyboard-Walking Pets

Cats Lock Is a Tiny Mac App Built for Keyboard-Walking Pets

The $2.99 Mac utility locks your keyboard and trackpad when your pet decides the laptop is a runway.

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Cats Lock Mac app official screenshot showing a cat-proof keyboard lock utility
Image: Cats Lock / Todd Alexander

Cats Lock Mac app exists because some pets treat an open laptop like shared property. The new macOS utility locks your keyboard and trackpad so a cat, dog or toddler cannot step across your Mac and turn a quiet afternoon into surprise emails, mystery shortcuts or a deleted paragraph.

Developer Todd Alexander launched the app on May 15, and the pitch is refreshingly simple. Cats Lock costs $2.99 once, has no subscription, requires no account and says it does not collect analytics or tracking data. It runs as a sandboxed Mac App Store app for macOS 14 or later.

A Small Fix for a Real Problem

The official Cats Lock press kit frames the app around pet chaos, but the use case is broader. It can also help when cleaning a keyboard, watching a video near a curious child or leaving a Mac open on a desk for a minute.

The app can play sounds, show an overlay and sit in the menu bar. The Mac App Store listing describes the lock shortcut as Command + Option + L, which is the safer detail to follow because app marketing copy can drift across a launch site and press kit.

The privacy posture also helps. A keyboard-locking app does not need cloud accounts, ad tech or a subscription dashboard. Cats Lock feels like the old-school Mac utility model in the best way: pay once, solve the annoyance and move on.

Cats Lock Mac app locked overlay screenshot
Image: Cats Lock

The Best Kind of Utility App

Cats Lock is not trying to become a platform. That is part of the appeal. It solves one goofy but common problem, charges a normal one-time price and stays out of the way. More small Mac utilities should be this honest.

If you follow clever app ideas and small software fixes, keep an eye on our apps coverage. This is exactly the kind of tiny tool that can save somebody from a very silly support ticket.