A Bear alternative with blocks instead of tags
Bear proved Mac-native notes could be beautiful. Locus keeps that bar and changes the shape: structured pages built from blocks, organized as a tree you can see — no subscription, no sync, no database between you and your words.
The Bear crowd and the Locus crowd want the same things — a real Mac app, local notes, typography that respects the writing. The fork is structure. Bear is a river: one continuous, tagged stream of styled text. Locus is a shelf of notebooks — pages with covers, blocks you can rearrange, tables and toggles and code that hold their shape, and a link graph that remembers why two pages know each other.
Locus vs. Bear, honestly
| Locus | Bear | |
|---|---|---|
| Native Mac app | Yes — Swift, macOS text machinery | Yes — one of the best |
| Editing model | Blocks — to-dos, tables, toggles, code | Markdown-styled continuous text |
| Organization | Pages in trees + backlinks + workspaces | Tags and nested tags |
| Where notes live | Readable JSON file you can open | Local database, iCloud for sync |
| Sync & iOS | None — Mac only, by design | Yes, with subscription |
| Page covers & icons | Yes — artwork, gradients, colors | No |
| Tables | Real rows and columns | Markdown tables |
| Version history | 60 snapshots per page + daily backup | No built-in history |
| Price | Free while in development | Free tier; Pro subscription |
Where Bear wins, it really wins: iPhone and iPad apps with polished sync. Locus is Mac-only on purpose — the trade is explained in local-first notes.
What structure buys you
Type /and the page grows whatever it needs — checklists with real checkboxes, tables with real columns, collapsible toggles, callouts, quotes, images you resize by hand. Every page can carry artwork or a color as its cover, and 22 themes restyle canvas, type, and code together. If you're also weighing the cloud tools, the Notion comparison and the private-notes checklist finish the picture.
Questions people ask
Bear is beautiful. Why would I switch?+
It is — and for linear, tag-organized notes it's hard to beat. Locus earns the look when notes stop being linear: projects that want to-dos next to tables next to code, pages that deserve a face, links between pages that remember their context.
Can I bring my Bear notes over?+
Export from Bear as Markdown, then File → Import in Locus and point it at the folder — each note becomes a page with native blocks. Tags come across as plain text; in Locus you'd reach for pages, sub-pages, and backlinks instead.
Does Locus have tags?+
No — organization in Locus is spatial rather than taxonomic: page trees, workspaces for separate areas of life, favorites and pins, plus backlinks and instant search. If your brain runs on #tag/subtag hierarchies, Bear does that better.
Is there a subscription?+
No. Locus is free while in development, and there's nothing to subscribe to because there's no sync infrastructure to fund — your notes live in a file on your Mac.
Free while in development · macOS 14 or later