We don’t think about laptop batteries until they betray us. One minute you’re in the flow state at 43%; the next, your screen goes black because macOS’s default battery indicator decided to round 6% down to "enough."
You want to stop guessing when your Mac will die. Skip it if: You’re fine with the panic of the 10% notification. Have you used Battery Bar Pro? Found a better alternative? Let me know in the comments below.
I spent two weeks stress-testing the latest version. Here is the honest, deep-dive verdict. At its core, Battery Bar Pro replaces the tiny, ambiguous battery icon in your Mac’s menu bar with a highly customizable, color-coded horizontal bar. But that’s like saying a Formula 1 car "has wheels." battery bar pro
More importantly, it has a . You can tell it: "Alert me when there is 30 minutes of battery left." This is the killer feature for road warriors. It decouples the warning from the percentage—because a gaming session at 25% might last 20 minutes, while reading a PDF at 15% might last 90. The CPU & Battery Hit (The Irony) You’re installing a battery monitor… that uses battery. How bad is it?
The "Time Remaining" feature actually works. During a video edit, it told me 1 hour 47 minutes left. macOS’s menu bar said 2 hours 25 minutes. Battery Bar Pro was right—I hit 5% exactly at the 1:49 mark. It factors for current load , not ideal conditions. Let’s address the elephant. The battery bar takes up horizontal space. On a 13-inch MacBook Air with a notched screen, the menu bar is already crowded. The default bar width is about 80 pixels. You can shrink it, but then you lose readability. We don’t think about laptop batteries until they betray us
I ran Activity Monitor for 72 hours. on an M2 MacBook Air. The default battery system process runs at about 0.2%. So you are paying a ~1% CPU tax for detailed data.
It solves a problem Apple refuses to acknowledge: that a percentage alone is insufficient data to make real-world decisions. For $7.99 (one-time, no subscription—a dying breed), it’s a buy-it-for-life utility. Have you used Battery Bar Pro
Enter —a veteran utility that has lived in the menu bars of power users for over a decade. But in an era where Apple has finally added basic battery health management and widgets, does a dedicated $8 utility still earn a spot on your login items?