Request: Restore Launchpad Functionality or Allow Customizable App Organization in macOS Tahoe

With macOS Tahoe, Launchpad has been replaced by an App Library–style mode within Spotlight. While the alleged intention is UX consistency across the Apple ecosystem, the result is both a catastrophic usability regression and a radical break in consistency with iOS and iPadOS.


Predefined App Library categorization is functionally incoherent:


On iOS and now macOS, Apple’s predefined App Library categories place apps with seemingly identical functionality into unrelated groups—for example, 3D scanning tools scattered across Education, Utilities, and Productivity. Instead of making apps easier to find, this effectively creates a labyrinth that users must traverse to locate apps whose names and icons they may not recall. However Apple defines its app categories, they are not only inconsistent but also hopelessly inadequate for the long tail of real-world applications and user workflows.


Loss of user control:


Launchpad enabled users to group and organize applications according to their workflows. This aligns with Apple’s own Human Interface Guidelines, which emphasize user control, discoverability, and predictable behavior. The new Spotlight interface removes that flexibility, locking users into predefined categories that both impede and mislead—and cannot be overridden.


Consistency across platforms is broken:


If the goal was to unify iOS, iPadOS, and macOS, this approach actually undermines consistency. On iOS and iPadOS, users can still rely on a customizable Home Screen—a Launchpad-like experience—as their primary way of launching apps. In Tahoe, that option has been removed. macOS now forces users to depend exclusively on Spotlight with App Library categories, while eliminating the very feature that was consistent across platforms.


Catastrophic impact on my workflow:


As an interdisciplinary artist working in 2D, 3D, and time-based media, as well as coding, I make extensive use of a constantly changing array of AI tools and experiment with many new apps and web services, which I often turn into Web Apps. I cannot possibly recall the names of every native and web app on my system. I need predictable access to groups of related tools. Tahoe’s new auto-categories split those apps apart arbitrarily, slowing me down and interrupting established workflows, forcing me to navigate the aforementioned labyrinth just to find what I need.


Proposal:


A constructive way forward

High-level objective: 


Simply restore Launchpad—or restore the ability to customize app categories/folders and manually assign apps to them, overriding or augmenting the predefined categories. This ensures users can launch apps according to their workflow, without needing to remember exact names or icons.


Possible solutions:


  • Allow manual subfolders within Applications, represented hierarchically in Spotlight.
  • Provide a fullscreen Launchpad-like organizer (with uninstall via long-click, etc.), either as a replacement or toggleable option.
  • Retain Apple’s auto-categories for those who prefer them, but let users override or augment them with their own.


In summary:


Tahoe eliminates a working, consistent paradigm (Launchpad/Home Screen) and forces reliance on an App Library system that categorizes poorly and cannot be customized. This is both a step backwards in functionality and a break in cross-platform consistency. A constructive solution is to restore Launchpad—or at least restore the ability for users to organize apps in ways that fit their workflows.

Posted on Sep 18, 2025 09:37 AM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Sep 18, 2025 11:39 AM

bobfriedman wrote:

I don't use spotlight. and should have the option not to.

You should give it a try. Once you get used to it, it's pretty great.


especially if you don't know the names of the apps until you see the icons in front of you...

Arrange aliases of all the apps you're likely to be using in subfolders in a folder called "My Apps" or something. Label the subfolders however makes sense to you. Put that folder on the desktop or, even better in my opinion, in the dock. Will it take 10 minutes? Sure but once it's done, it's done. At least until you add another app.

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Sep 18, 2025 11:39 AM in response to bobfriedman

bobfriedman wrote:

I don't use spotlight. and should have the option not to.

You should give it a try. Once you get used to it, it's pretty great.


especially if you don't know the names of the apps until you see the icons in front of you...

Arrange aliases of all the apps you're likely to be using in subfolders in a folder called "My Apps" or something. Label the subfolders however makes sense to you. Put that folder on the desktop or, even better in my opinion, in the dock. Will it take 10 minutes? Sure but once it's done, it's done. At least until you add another app.

Sep 18, 2025 10:02 AM in response to Matthew MacSkeptic

Matthew MacSkeptic wrote:


Consistency across platforms is broken:

If the goal was to unify iOS, iPadOS, and macOS, this approach actually undermines consistency. On iOS and iPadOS, users can still rely on a customizable Home Screen—a Launchpad-like experience—as their primary way of launching apps. In Tahoe, that option has been removed. macOS now forces users to depend exclusively on Spotlight with App Library categories, while eliminating the very feature that was consistent across platforms.

And your Mac still has a customizable "home screen," it's just called the desktop. You can still put pretty much whatever you want on it. If you want to create your own folders of apps, I do recommend you use aliases as the apps themselves should stay in the application folder.

Sep 18, 2025 10:18 AM in response to Matthew MacSkeptic

Update: Now spotlight search isn't working for apps!


Not only has replacing Launchpad with predefined and inadequate categories in the Spotlight completely broken my personal workflow but I am now encountering a bug preventing me from searching for apps, so I have no other choice but to scroll through over 250 icons to find the app I'm looking for. 


I honestly do not understand what the rationale was for this change by Apple. Vital functionality that I relied on frequently in my daily work was replaced with a fundamentally broken one. It is broken in iOS and iPad OS and it is broken here too. In fact it should be obvious that predefined app categories could not possibly address real world use cases and forcing users into them would break more workflows than they could ever possibly address. 


That is on top of the implementation being buggy.


This is beyond frustrating!

Sep 18, 2025 10:34 AM in response to Matthew MacSkeptic

Matthew MacSkeptic wrote:

I have done so there as well.

That is your only option. On this site, you are just posting to others users like you where your requests for change will not get the attention from Apple. Personally I rely on the Dock and Finder for app launching and organization without ever using the LaunchPad. I have tried it in previous iterations, but just viewed it as a way to transition iOS users to the Mac with a familiar interface. The direction that Apple plans for LaunchPad is unknown, although I do see a convergenge in the OS across platforms, and now is the time to send your feedback to Apple for guidance on what you expect.

Sep 18, 2025 10:27 AM in response to IdrisSeabright

Thanks for the suggestion but do you feel that storing my collection of apps and/or shortcuts is a reasonable solution to this problem?


I don't think this is how the desktop should be used and that sounds like a whole lot of work for me that should be handled by my operating system, and was handled very well up until the functionality in question was stropped out in Tahoe for no good reason.

Sep 18, 2025 10:46 AM in response to leroydouglas

The new app function in Tahoe is especially annoying for those that don't know the names of all your apps rendering the new apps function useless to me... forces you to open applications and search if it is not a standard apple app.. unfortunately I had all my apps properly grouped before and now I am searching in a really time consuming way... I don't use spotlight. and should have the option not to. especially if you don't know the names of the apps until you see the icons in front of you...

Request: Restore Launchpad Functionality or Allow Customizable App Organization in macOS Tahoe

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