copypaster isn't a drop‑in replacement for TextExpander, AutoHotkey, or Keyboard Maestro — those are broader tools. The best free TextExpander alternative is Espanso. The best AutoHotkey alternative on Mac is Keyboard Maestro (or Hammerspoon for scriptable setups).
copypaster is the right pick when all you wanted from those tools was to get a block of text into an application and make it look like typing. For that narrow job — screencasts, paste‑restricted forms, AI‑drafted text, accessibility — copypaster does it cleanly without scripting or snippet management.
What are you actually trying to replace?
"Alternative to X" usually means one of three things. Figure out which yours is before comparing — the right answer changes completely.
- Snippet expansion — you want to type
::myemailand have it expand to your email address. This is TextExpander territory. - Keyboard/macro automation — you want to remap keys, trigger complex macros, automate window management. AutoHotkey / Keyboard Maestro territory.
- Automated typing of arbitrary text — you want to take text you've already written and have it typed into an application at a controllable speed with human‑looking rhythm. This is what copypaster is for.
TextExpander alternatives
TextExpander is a paid snippet manager ($3.33/mo+ billed annually). The well‑known alternatives:
| Tool | Platform | Price | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Espanso | Windows, macOS, Linux | Free (open source) | Power users comfortable with YAML; cross‑platform teams |
| PhraseExpress | Windows, macOS | Free for personal; paid pro | Windows‑heavy teams needing SQL/network sync |
| aText | macOS | ~$5 one‑time | Mac users wanting simple + cheap + native |
| Raycast (with snippet extension) | macOS | Free tier | Mac users already using Raycast as launcher |
| Alfred snippets | macOS | Paid Powerpack | Alfred power users |
| copypaster | Windows, macOS, Linux | From €4.99/mo or €49 lifetime | Delivering long text into paste‑restricted forms; not a snippet manager |
Default recommendation: Espanso if you're comfortable with YAML configs, aText if you're on Mac and want native/cheap, stay with TextExpander if you need the team sync features.
AutoHotkey alternatives
AutoHotkey is a free Windows‑only scripting language for keyboard macros, automation, and custom hotkeys. It's not really replaceable by any single tool — most alternatives cover a subset of its scope.
| Tool | Platform | Price | Covers which AHK use case |
|---|---|---|---|
| AutoHotkey | Windows | Free (open source) | Everything (baseline) |
| Keyboard Maestro | macOS | ~$36 one‑time | Full macro/automation suite on Mac |
| BetterTouchTool | macOS | ~$10/yr or $22 lifetime | Gesture + keyboard shortcuts on Mac |
| Hammerspoon | macOS | Free (open source) | Lua‑scripted macOS automation (AHK‑like scope) |
| AutoIt | Windows | Free | Similar scripting language for Windows |
| PowerToys Keyboard Manager | Windows | Free (Microsoft) | Simple key remapping only |
| copypaster | Windows, macOS, Linux | From €4.99/mo or €49 lifetime | Only the "type arbitrary text into an app" piece |
Default recommendation: Keyboard Maestro if you're on Mac and want the full AHK‑equivalent experience. Hammerspoon if you want free and scriptable on Mac. AutoIt if you need an AHK‑like alternative that happens to not be AHK on Windows.
Keyboard Maestro alternatives
Keyboard Maestro is macOS‑only. If you're looking for alternatives:
- BetterTouchTool — overlaps heavily on macro and gesture territory, cheaper.
- Raycast — lighter automation via extensions, free tier.
- Hammerspoon — free, scriptable, power user.
- Shortcuts (Apple built‑in) — free, limited but improving.
- copypaster — narrow. Only solves typing text into an app.
When is copypaster actually the right answer?
copypaster does exactly one thing: type your pasted text into whatever application has focus, at an adjustable WPM, with optional human rhythm and typos. That's it. It's not a launcher, snippet manager, macro platform, or scripting language.
You're better off with copypaster than with TextExpander, AutoHotkey, or Keyboard Maestro in these specific cases:
- Long text into paste‑restricted forms — expanders paste, which fails in paste‑blocked fields. copypaster types. See form‑filling.
- Screencasts and tutorials — expanders deliver text instantly; copypaster types at a readable pace for video capture. See screencasts.
- Live coding demos — a prepared code block typed at 120 WPM beats pasting or live‑typing. See live coding demos.
- AI‑drafted text into timing‑checked forms — typing changes delivery profile; expanders don't. See humanize AI text.
- Accessibility / RSI relief for long text entry — compose once, let copypaster handle the typing load. See accessibility.
You're better off with one of the other tools when you need: managed snippet libraries with triggers (TextExpander, Espanso), general OS automation and hotkeys (AutoHotkey, Keyboard Maestro), or gesture control (BetterTouchTool).
Can I use copypaster alongside TextExpander or AutoHotkey?
Yes, and most users do. A common setup: TextExpander or Espanso manages short snippets; copypaster handles the long‑text‑into‑a‑form case where expanders hit limits (paste‑blocked fields, rich‑text sanitization, length caps). The two don't conflict.
Frequently asked.
What's the best free alternative to TextExpander?
Espanso (open source, cross‑platform) is the strongest free TextExpander alternative — active development, YAML snippet configs, hot reload. aText is paid but cheap (~$5 one‑time) and popular with Mac users. PhraseExpress has a free tier for personal use.
What's a good AutoHotkey alternative for Mac?
AutoHotkey is Windows‑only. On Mac, Keyboard Maestro is the closest equivalent (paid, extensive macro system). BetterTouchTool handles gesture‑based automation. Hammerspoon is a free Lua‑scriptable alternative for power users. Raycast extensions cover lighter workflows.
Is copypaster a TextExpander alternative?
Only partly. TextExpander manages snippet libraries with triggers and variables; copypaster does not manage snippets. What copypaster does better than text expanders is deliver long text into paste‑restricted forms and apps that reject expander shortcuts. Most users running into these limits pair copypaster with their existing expander rather than replacing it.
What should I use instead of AutoHotkey for automated typing?
If you want general automation scripting, AutoHotkey is hard to beat — there's no true drop‑in alternative on Windows. If all you wanted it for was typing text into an application at a controlled speed with natural rhythm, copypaster does that with zero scripting. Different scope.
How does copypaster compare to Espanso or PhraseExpress?
Espanso and PhraseExpress are snippet expanders — they insert short, trigger‑activated fragments. copypaster is an auto‑typer — it takes whatever text you paste in and types it into the target app at adjustable WPM. For short snippets via hotkey, use an expander. For long text into forms that reject paste or expander shortcuts, use copypaster. Many users keep both.
Which alternative is best if I want automated typing for demos or tutorials?
For screencasts, live coding, and product demos where you want code or text to appear as natural typing on screen, copypaster is purpose‑built for this. AutoHotkey can do it with custom scripts; text expanders can't (they paste or keyboard‑shortcut, not type‑per‑keystroke).
Think copypaster fits your use case?
Free for 5 pastes, no credit card. Works alongside whichever snippet or macro tool you already use.
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