Hotkey Cheatsheet is a free library of keyboard shortcut cheat sheets for desktop software. It helps you open app hotkeys for Windows, macOS, and Linux in one place.
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about finding and using keyboard shortcuts.
Browse the app directory, category pages, or operating system pages, then open the app cheat sheet you need. Each app page groups shortcuts by category so you can scan the relevant commands quickly.
Hotkey Cheatsheet currently covers keyboard shortcuts for Windows, macOS, and Linux, with app pages showing the operating systems available for each shortcut set.
Yes. We update app hotkey pages as the library grows so the shortcut reference stays useful for current versions of popular tools.
Yes, Hotkey Cheatsheet is completely free to use. No account, subscription, or registration is required — just open the site and browse the library.
Yes. Use the OS pages to open Windows, macOS, or Linux collections, then switch platforms again from the tabs on each app page when multiple shortcut sets are available.
Each app page groups shortcuts by category (such as Editing, Navigation, or View), then lists individual actions with their hotkeys. You can filter by operating system using the OS tabs at the top of the page.
The library is expanded as new shortcut collections are prepared and reviewed. When fresh app pages are published, they appear in the app directory, category pages, and operating system collections.
No account is needed. Hotkey Cheatsheet is fully accessible without signing up. Just open the page for any app and start browsing shortcuts.
Yes. On each app detail page, OS switcher tabs let you toggle between Windows, macOS, and Linux shortcut sets instantly. Only the shortcuts available for the selected OS are displayed.
The library covers development tools (VS Code, JetBrains IDEs, terminal apps), design software (Figma, Photoshop, Sketch), office suites (Excel, Word, Google Docs), browsers, multimedia editors, and more.
Start with the actions you repeat most often — copy, paste, undo, and file operations. Use the category view on each app page to work through one group at a time, and practice a few new shortcuts each day until they become muscle memory.
Browse App Hotkeys Faster
Cheat sheets organized by app and OS, so you can open the shortcuts for the software you actually use without bouncing between docs.
