BusyCal vs Apple Calendar for Mac: Is It Worth the Upgrade?
Apple Calendar is fine. BusyCal is exceptional. We compare both to help Mac users decide if the upgrade is worth it — and how to get BusyCal free.
Quick Verdict
BusyCal wins for any Mac user who relies on their calendar for work. Apple Calendar is fine for casual use but falls short for professionals.
Bottom Line
BusyCal wins for any Mac user who relies on their calendar for work. Apple Calendar is fine for casual use but falls short for professionals.
I’ve been a Mac user and Apple IT consultant for years. I’ve tried every calendar app on the platform. I keep coming back to BusyCal — and after using it daily, going back to Apple Calendar feels like typing with oven mitts on.
This isn’t a knock on Apple. Apple Calendar is clean, syncs perfectly, and works fine for checking what’s happening this week. But if your calendar is a core work tool — if you schedule client appointments, manage multiple accounts, or live and die by your schedule — BusyCal is in a different league.
Quick verdict
Use Apple Calendar if: You check your calendar occasionally, only manage one or two accounts, and don’t need anything beyond the basics. It’s free, built-in, and perfectly adequate for casual use.
Use BusyCal if: Your calendar is a serious work tool. You manage multiple accounts, want natural language input, need better recurring event handling, or want a proper menu bar calendar that actually shows your schedule at a glance.
Natural language input
Type “Call David tomorrow at 2pm for 30 minutes” and BusyCal creates the event instantly — right title, date, time, and duration. Apple Calendar has some natural language support but it’s inconsistent and requires more manual correction.
For consultants and anyone scheduling a lot of appointments, this alone saves meaningful time every day.
Winner: BusyCal
Menu bar integration
BusyCal’s menu bar shows your upcoming events in a clean dropdown — see your whole day without switching apps. Apple Calendar has zero menu bar presence. You have to open the app to see anything.
Winner: BusyCal
Recurring events
Editing one instance of a recurring event in Apple Calendar without touching the others is clunky and inconsistent. BusyCal handles this gracefully every time.
If you have weekly client calls, monthly billing reminders, or any complex recurring schedule, BusyCal’s handling is noticeably better.
Winner: BusyCal
Multiple account management
Both apps handle iCloud, Google, Exchange, and CalDAV sources. But BusyCal gives you finer control over display, better color coding, and more reliable sync behavior across accounts.
Winner: BusyCal (slight edge)
Weather integration
BusyCal shows weather forecasts directly on calendar days — genuinely useful for consultants doing on-site work. Apple Calendar shows nothing weather-related.
Winner: BusyCal
Task integration
BusyCal has a built-in task system integrated directly into your calendar view — meetings and to-dos in one place. Apple Calendar has no task support.
Winner: BusyCal
Design and simplicity
Apple Calendar wins here. It’s clean, minimal, and native. If you want something that disappears into the background and just works, Apple Calendar is the better choice. BusyCal has more options — which means more to configure.
Winner: Apple Calendar
Price
Apple Calendar is free. BusyCal is $49.99 one-time — or included in Setapp for $9.99/month alongside 250+ other Mac apps.
If you’re evaluating BusyCal alone, $49.99 is fair for a professional tool you’ll use daily for years. But if you already use a few other Mac apps, Setapp makes the math very easy.
Winner: Apple Calendar on price alone, Setapp for overall value
How to get BusyCal
Best way: Try it free through Setapp. For $9.99/month you get BusyCal plus 250+ other premium Mac apps — CleanMyMac X, Bartender, iStat Menus, and more. There’s a free 7-day trial with no commitment.
Prefer a one-time purchase? BusyCal is $49.99 directly at busymac.com.
Final verdict
BusyCal is the calendar app Apple Calendar would be if Apple prioritized power users. Natural language input, menu bar integration, better recurring events, task support, and weather — every feature it adds is genuinely useful for professional Mac users.
If your calendar is a core work tool, the upgrade is absolutely worth it. The only question is whether to buy it directly or get it through Setapp alongside a dozen other apps you’ll actually use.
FAQ
Is BusyCal worth it if I already use Apple Calendar? If you schedule more than a few appointments per week and manage multiple calendars, yes. The natural language input and menu bar integration alone are worth the switch.
Does BusyCal sync with Google Calendar and iCloud? Yes — BusyCal syncs with iCloud, Google Calendar, Exchange, Office 365, and any CalDAV source.
What’s the difference between BusyCal and BusyContacts? BusyCal is a calendar app. BusyContacts is the same company’s contact manager — they integrate together so meetings show full contact details. Both are available on Setapp.
Is Setapp worth it just for BusyCal? At $9.99/month, probably not for BusyCal alone — the $49.99 direct purchase makes more sense. But if you also use CleanMyMac X, Bartender, iStat Menus, or other Setapp apps, it becomes excellent value quickly.
Our Verdict
BusyCal wins for any Mac user who relies on their calendar for work. Apple Calendar is fine for casual use but falls short for professionals.