Web Apps: How to Turn Any Website Into a Standalone Dock App Web Apps let you turn your favorite websites into focused, app-like experiences that live in the Dock, launch instantly, and stay separate from your main browser.

A MacBook laptop displaying a dark-themed ChatGPT window with the prompt "Where should we begin?" highlights the versatility of Web Apps. The dock below features various app icons, and the Apple logo appears in the top right corner.
Image Credit: AppleMagazine

Web Apps are one of those features that quietly change how you use your computer. Instead of juggling dozens of browser tabs, you can give important websites their own space, their own icon, and their own window, just like native apps.

Email dashboards, project tools, music services, calendars, or writing platforms suddenly feel lighter and more intentional when they’re not buried inside a browser.

Web Apps on Macs

A Web App is a website saved as a standalone app using Safari. It opens in its own window, appears in the Dock, supports notifications, and remembers its own state.

Unlike bookmarks or pinned tabs, web apps behave independently. Closing Safari doesn’t close them. They don’t share tabs or clutter your browsing session.

This makes them ideal for services you use daily.

Improving Focus

Browsers are designed for exploration. Work often isn’t.

Web Apps remove distractions by isolating a single site. There’s no address bar, no extra tabs, and no temptation to drift elsewhere. The interface becomes clean and task-oriented.

This is especially useful for:

  • Work dashboards and admin tools
  • Writing platforms
  • Messaging services
  • Music or video services
  • Personal finance or planning tools

Each site gets its own identity on your Mac.

How to Create a Web App on Mac

Creating a web app takes less than a minute.

Workflow

Safari > Open the website

Safari menu > Add to Dock

Choose a name and confirm. macOS creates a standalone app and places it in the Dock automatically.

From that point on, the site behaves like a native Mac app.

A MacBook screen displaying a dark mode browser window with the ChatGPT homepage open, highlighting the "Export as PDF…" option in the "File" menu. Web Apps interface and an Apple logo appear in the top right corner.
Image Credit: AppleMagazine

Using Web Apps Like Native Apps

Once created, Web Apps integrate naturally into the system.

They:

  • Appear in the Dock
  • Support Mission Control and Stage Manager
  • Stay open independently of Safari
  • Receive notifications if supported
  • Reopen exactly where you left off

You can assign them to desktops, include them in Stage Manager workspaces, or launch them with Spotlight.

Managing and Removing Web Apps

Web Apps are managed just like regular apps.

To remove one:

  • Right-click the Dock icon
  • Choose Options > Remove from Dock
  • Or delete it from the Applications folder

Removing the app doesn’t affect your account or data on the website.

A laptop screen displays a browser window with a popup to add a ChatGPT link to bookmarks. The browser is in dark mode, highlighting the seamless integration of Web Apps, and the Apple logo appears in the upper-right corner outside the laptop.
Image Credit: AppleMagazine

Best Use Cases

Web Apps shine when a website behaves like a service rather than a page.

Common examples include:

  • Email and communication tools
  • Task managers and planners
  • Streaming music players
  • Cloud-based editors
  • Internal work tools

They’re especially helpful when paired with Stage Manager, keeping different tasks clearly separated.

A laptop displays a scenic desert landscape as its wallpaper. A large purple arrow points to the center of the dock, highlighting Web Apps at the bottom of the screen. The Apple logo appears in the top right corner.
Image Credit: AppleMagazine

Privacy

Because Web Apps use Safari, they inherit Apple’s privacy protections. Tracking prevention, password management, and system-level security features remain active.

This makes web apps feel safer and more consistent than third-party wrappers or browser extensions.

Web Apps sit between native apps and browser tabs. They don’t replace full software, but they reduce friction for web-based tools you rely on.

Once you start using them, the Dock becomes a curated set of workspaces instead of a mix of random icons. Your Mac feels faster and more intentional, with the web integrated in a way that respects focus rather than competing for it.

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Jack
About the Author

Jack is a journalist at AppleMagazine, covering technology, digital culture, and the fast changing relationship between people and platforms. With a background in digital media, his work focuses on how emerging technologies shape everyday life, from AI and streaming to social media and consumer tech.