Touch Bar

A feature at the top of the keyboard on some Mac computers. The Touch Bar lets you use familiar gestures—like tap, swipe, or slide—to adjust settings, use Siri, access function keys, and do tasks in apps.

A keyboard with the Touch Bar across the top; Touch ID is located at the right end of the Touch Bar.

The Touch Bar includes Touch ID, which lets you unlock your Mac and some password-protected items, use Apple Pay to make purchases on the web, and purchase items from the iTunes Store, App Store, and Apple Books.

By default, the Touch Bar shows the Control Strip, which lets you adjust common settings—like brightness and volume—and ask Siri. You can expand the Control Strip to access additional settings and features, such as Mission Control and Launchpad, and even customize it.

The Touch Bar with buttons that vary by app or task on the left and the collapsed Control Strip on the right.

The other buttons in the Touch Bar vary, depending on the app you’re using or the task you’re performing. Here’s how the Touch Bar looks when you tap the Run Options button in the Touch Bar to run code in Swift Playgrounds.

The Touch Bar with buttons from the Swift Playground app that include—from left to right—Run My Code, Step Through My Code, and Step Slowly.

See the Apple Support article How to use the Touch Bar on your MacBook Pro.