See the menu bar icons your notch is hiding.
ChocolateBar is a native Mac app that adds a second row under your menu bar. The icons stuck behind the notch show up there, and so do your open app windows. It’s a small native download that runs on any Mac with macOS Monterey or later, with a 7-day refund.
ChocolateBar is for the moment your menu bar runs out of room. It adds a second row, so the icons your notch hid are visible again.
Why does the notch hide your menu bar?
Open Slack, Linear, your VPN, a password manager and a sync client, and half of them vanish. On a 14" or 16" MacBook Pro, menu bar items hidden by the notch aren’t a quirk - they’re a daily papercut. And finding the right app window means Cmd-Tab roulette or a trip to the Dock.
What if there were a second row?
ChocolateBar adds a thin strip directly below the menu bar. Your hidden icons show up there, along with the app windows you have open. Click an icon and the real menu fires. Click a window and it comes forward.
See it in action
Lay the strip out wide across the screen, or stack it into a tidy column down one side. Same hidden icons and open windows, your orientation.
A tidy column down one side
Stand the strip up against either edge of your screen. The hidden menu bar icons and your open windows stack into a slim column, out of the way but a glance away.
Handy on a tall display, or any time you’d rather keep the top of the screen clear.
What does ChocolateBar do?
Your hidden icons
A second row under the menu bar that stays put. Everything macOS hid behind the notch, visible again.
Open windows, one click
Running apps show up in the same strip. Switch without Cmd-Tab or a trip to the Dock.
Same menus, real clicks
Click an icon in the strip and ChocolateBar clicks the real one in your menu bar. Same menu, no fake UI.
Set up once
New menu bar icons and windows appear automatically. Install, grant permission, done.
How does ChocolateBar work?
Install in seconds
Download the 5MB app, drag it to Applications, launch.
Grant Accessibility
ChocolateBar reads and clicks your existing menu bar items and lists active windows. Sandboxed. Nothing leaves your Mac.
Use your menu bar
Hidden icons and open apps appear in the strip below. Click them like you always have.
By the numbers
ChocolateBar reads your menu bar through Apple’s Accessibility API. That’s the only public way to see another app’s menu bar items. We’ve tried it with 30+ utilities across Apple Silicon and Intel Macs. It uses about 30 MB of RAM at launch.
- 5 MB
- Universal (Apple Silicon + Intel)
- Monterey through Sequoia · Tahoe soon
- Apple Silicon and Intel Macs
- 7 days, no forms
- 30+ menu bar utilities
What does ChocolateBar cost?
$10
Launch deal · use LAUNCH10 at checkout · first 10 only
Lifetime updates · Every Mac you own · 7-day refund · Monterey–Sequoia · Tahoe soon · Apple Silicon · Direct download, no App Store account
Send feedback
What’s working? What isn’t?
Bug reports, feature ideas, anything that felt off. Read by a human. Email is optional - leave it if you want a reply.
Questions
How do I install ChocolateBar?
What problem does ChocolateBar solve?
Why does it need Accessibility permission?
I installed it but nothing happens when I open it.
xattr -dr com.apple.quarantine /Applications/ChocolateBar.app and try again. If neither works, email [email protected] with your macOS version (Apple menu → About This Mac) and we’ll sort it.What’s the refund policy?
How do I uninstall ChocolateBar?
tccutil reset Accessibility app.chocolatebar.chocolatebar in Terminal.)Does it really show open app windows too?
Does it work on Apple Silicon and the latest macOS?
A menu bar icon isn’t showing in the strip.
Which apps does it work with?
Last but not least
Have a great time with ChocolateBar.