How To Access & Search Safari History On Mac - OSXDaily
Maybe your like
- Home
- Mac OS
- iPhone
- iPad
- Tips & Tricks
- News
- iOS
- Troubleshooting
![]()
Just about all modern web browsers default to maintaining a history log of your web browsing activity, and Safari for Mac is no different. This article will focus on how to access your Safari history on the Mac, and also how to search Safari browsing history for specific words, terms, and matches.
Accessing and searching through Safari browser history can be helpful for tracking down websites or articles that were previously visited on a particular topic but that you’ve since forgotten, retrieving previously visited websites, looking for a particular match, amongst many other valid uses for individual users, parents, public computers, information security, systems administrators, and much more.
Searching Safari web browsing history on a Mac is easy, here’s how it works:
How to Search Safari History on Mac
- Open the Safari web browser on the Mac if you have not done so already
- Pull down the “History” menu and choose “Show All History”
- You’ll now be presented with all stored Safari History of web browsing activity, with each browsing history session separated by date
- Click into the search box seen in the upper right corner of the History screen
- Type in any word, term, or phrase to search the Safari History for, any matches will be shown on screen


In the example here, we searched for the term “Chromebook” and Safari returned all matches for that term.
Safari History Search will find matches as far back as possible, searching through all Safari history for the current Mac user. Anything matching will be returned as a search result.
Searching browser history can be helpful for many reasons, whether you’re trying to recall something you were looking at some time ago, or you want to find a website or article about a particular topic you know you have visited before. Of course searching through web browser history can also be useful for forensic purposes and data auditing too, for those involved in fields where that can be necessary or relevant.
Safari will store browser history for as long as you have been using Safari, unless it has been cleared specifically. There are multiple options for clearing Safari history, and if you want to completely clear all history in Safari on the Mac that is possible. You can also prevent browser history from being stored in the first place by choosing to use Private Browsing mode in Safari for Mac, which doesn’t store local browsing session data or cookies.
Do keep in mind if you (or the target Mac) run multiple different versions of Safari, like Safari alongside Safari Tech Preview, then you’d need to check history in both Safari browsers, and likewise you’d want to clear history in both of them too if you were wanting to clear our history for whatever reason.
The capability to find and look through past browsing data is not unique to the Mac, you can also search Safari browsing history on the iPhone and iPad too, and virtually every other modern web browser also has the same capability, except for most TOR browsers and privacy centric apps like Firefox Focus.
- X
- More
- Tumblr
- Telegram
Related
Enjoy this tip? Subscribe to our newsletter!
Get more of our great Apple tips, tricks, and important news delivered to your inbox with the OSXDaily newsletter.
Subscribe Loading...Thank you!
You have successfully joined our subscriber list.
Related articles:
- How to Recover Deleted Safari History on Mac
- How to Delete Specific Safari History on Mac
- View Browsing History on iPhone, iPad, iPod touch from Safari
- How to Clear Google Maps Search History on iPhone & iPad
7 Comments
» Comments RSS Feed
- Juliana says: September 10, 2018 at 6:24 pm
My safari on my MacBook Pro is getting buggy and a lot of things aren’t working, like I can’t click on an email address to start an email from the mail program, I click and nothing happens. Now I am trying to find a web page from a few days ago, so I try to go to ‘show all history’ but nothing happens. I can’t get my history to show in the browser!! It does have recent history, it’s just that I can’t access my whole history like I should be able to. What gives?
Reply - Nina says: April 13, 2018 at 9:35 am
I used to use history a lot when I created a search in Safari. After going to a website that lead to further exploration it would sometimes take clicking the back arrow several times to get back to the original search and it was quicker to go to history and just click on the original search. Since one of the recent updates I have been unable to find the original searches any more. I don’t know if I am just not seeing it or if it isn’t there. Anyone else have this problem?
Reply - George says: April 11, 2018 at 3:37 pm
I have asked this before but I’m asking it again. It is possible to make a guide on how to go to root and _delete_ the option “new private window” from the File dropdown menu? How to edit the nib file etc…
Reply- Goron says: April 11, 2018 at 6:36 pm
You can Enable Parental Controls on Mac and that can be used to disable Safari Private Mode.
Or this below, which I found on the web and would not recommend to anyone:
—-
If logging isn’t practical or you want to be more proactive and prevent Private Browsing from being accessible in the first place, it is possible (though not a short process) to disable Private Browsing if you are willing to mess with Safari’s internal files.
Note that macOS 10.12+ will not allow you to modify, overwrite, or delete Safari. You can make the following modifications to a copy of Safari and put that version in the Dock, but the original Safari will still need to exist in the Applications folder.
Install the necessary files
Install Xcode (available in the App Store) Download a zip file of Nib-Decompiler from GitHub (or clone the repository if you know how to do that) Open the NibDecompiler.xcodeproj Xcode project in Xcode Compile the project. This will produce a file named NibDecompiler.action. You can now close the project. Copy NibDecompiler.action into ~/Library/Automator* From your download, copy NibDecompiler.workflow into ~/Library/Services* Remove the “New Private Window” option from the menu bar
Note that this involves editing the Safari internal files. You will need to redo these steps every time you update Safari.
Go to Safari in the Finder and right-click “Show Package Contents” This will open the app as if it were a folder. Go to Contents, then Resources, then Base.lproj folder. Find MainMenu.nib. Copy it outside of the package somewhere (like the Desktop). Right-click on the file and choose “NibDecompiler”. The file will be made editable. Open the file in Xcode (should be double-clickable) In the window with the Safari menu, choose “Safari” to expand it. Click on the “New Private Window” menu item. Hit the delete key to see it disappear. Save the file. Back in the Base.lproj folder of the Safari app, make a copy MainMenu.nib just in case something goes wrong and you need to restore it. Copy your edited MainMenu.nib to Base.lproj, overwriting the existing one. Open Safari to make sure that it still opens (if it doesn’t, restore your original MainMenu.nib file). (Optional) If everything works, you may delete the backup MainMenu.nib if you so choose. By removing the “New Private Window” menu item from the menu bar, they will not be able to enter private browsing. Additionally, keyboard shortcuts are tied to menu items, so that’s disabled too.
* ~ means your user home directory. Library is a hidden folder that isn’t visible when you navigate to the home directory. You can get to this folder in the Finder by going to the “Go” menu and choosing “Connect to Folder…”, then typing in ~/Library. You will then see the folders you need to copy files to.
Instructions copied from this MacRumors forum thread (https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/how-to-disable-private-browsing-in-safari.175238/page-3#post-23387488)
Reply- no way says: April 11, 2018 at 10:27 pm
TL;DNR
Reply
- no way says: April 11, 2018 at 10:27 pm
- Goron says: April 11, 2018 at 6:36 pm
- dudu bro says: April 10, 2018 at 2:33 pm
You can see things you wish you didn’t see by doing this on someone elses computer!
Reply- Sarcasticon says: April 11, 2018 at 4:58 am
You can find cold things in their refrigerators, too, genius.
Reply
- Sarcasticon says: April 11, 2018 at 4:58 am
Leave a Reply
Click here to cancel reply.Name (required)
Mail (will not be published) (required)
Website
« How to Use Cloudflare DNS on Mac OS for Speed & Privacy How to Offload Apps on iPhone or iPad to Free Up Storage Space » Shop on Amazon.com and help support OSXDaily!Subscribe to OSXDaily
Tips & Tricks
- - How to Adjust Liquid Glass on Lock Screen of iPhone
- - Tidy Up Messages by Auto-Deleting Verification Codes on iPhone, Mac, iPad
- - Bring Falling Snow & Christmas Lights to Mac with Snowy
- - How to Disable Camera Lock Screen Swipe on iPhone
- - Affinity is a Powerful Free Photoshop Alternative for Mac (and Windows)
News
- - First Beta of iOS 26.3 & macOS Tahoe 26.3 Released for Testing
- - iOS 18.7.3 & iPadOS 18.7.3 Security Updates Released
- - MacOS Sequoia 15.7.3 & MacOS Sonoma 14.8.3 Security Updates Released
- - Watch Charlie Brown Christmas for Free This Weekend (December 13 & 14) with Apple TV
- - MacOS Tahoe 26.2 Update Released for Mac
iPhone / iPad
- - How to Adjust Liquid Glass on Lock Screen of iPhone
- - Tidy Up Messages by Auto-Deleting Verification Codes on iPhone, Mac, iPad
- - iOS 18.7.3 & iPadOS 18.7.3 Security Updates Released
- - iOS 26.2 Update Released for iPhone & iPad
- - Add Christmas Lights to Home Screen, Dock, & Desktop with Festivitas for iPhone & Mac
Mac
- - Tidy Up Messages by Auto-Deleting Verification Codes on iPhone, Mac, iPad
- - MacOS Sequoia 15.7.3 & MacOS Sonoma 14.8.3 Security Updates Released
- - MacOS Tahoe 26.2 Update Released for Mac
- - Bring Falling Snow & Christmas Lights to Mac with Snowy
- - Make Your Active Foreground Window Obvious on MacOS Tahoe with Alan
Troubleshooting
- - Fixing the “Civilization 6 is Damaged” Error on Mac
- - Fix for Wi-Fi Issues with iOS 26.1 on iPhone: Wi-Fi Not Working, Dropping, No Connection, Slow
- - macOS Tahoe 26.1 Improves Battery Life Significantly of MacBook Air & Pro
- - Reduce Transparency Does Not Work in macOS Tahoe 26.1?
- - Spotlight Can’t Find Local Files on Mac? A Fix & Workaround
OSXDaily
About OSXDaily | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Sitemap
This website is unrelated to Apple Inc
All trademarks and copyrights on this website are property of their respective owners.
© 2026 OS X Daily. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction without explicit permission is prohibited.
Tag » How To Find History On Mac
-
Search Your Web Browsing History In Safari On Mac - Apple Support
-
Go Back To Webpages You Already Visited In Safari On Mac
-
How To View Browsing History In Safari [Tutorial] - YouTube
-
3 Ways To View Your Browser History On A Mac - WikiHow
-
How To View Safari History On Your Mac?
-
How To Clear History On Mac (Safari, Chrome, Firefox) - SoftwareHow
-
How To Clear Browsing History On Mac - Setapp
-
How To Find And Delete Google Search History On Mac - IMyMac
-
Searching Your Command History On MacOS Terminal - Stack Overflow
-
How To See Incognito History Cache On Your Mac - MacPaw
-
How To Find My History On Safari Mac
-
How To Recover Deleted History On Mac Google Chrome Or Safari
-
3 Ways To Recover Deleted Safari History On MacBook (2022)
-
How To See Private Browsing History On Windows Or Mac ... - Neeva