This page is a complete keyboard shortcut reference for Find My on macOS, covering all 12 shortcuts organized into 3 sections. Whether you’re new to Find My or looking to master advanced features, this cheat sheet has every key combination you need — from basic editing and navigation to app-specific power-user actions.
Keyboard shortcuts are the fastest way to work in Find My. Every time you use a shortcut instead of reaching for the mouse, you save a few seconds — and those seconds compound into hours over weeks and months. Start with the shortcuts you use most (copy, paste, undo, save), then gradually add app-specific ones as they become relevant to your workflow. Bookmark this page or download the PDF cheat sheet for quick reference.
Using keyboard shortcuts in Find My reduces context switching between keyboard and mouse, helping you maintain focus and work more efficiently. Research shows that shortcut-driven workflows can save up to 8 working days per year compared to menu-driven navigation. On macOS, most Find My shortcuts follow standard conventions — once you learn the modifier key patterns, new shortcuts become intuitive.
Tips for Learning Shortcuts
- Practice one new Find My shortcut each day. Muscle memory builds faster when you focus on a single combination at a time rather than trying to learn them all at once.
- Print or bookmark this page for quick reference while working in Find My. Having shortcuts visible nearby helps bridge the gap between looking them up and recalling them from memory.
- Start with the shortcuts you use most. In Find My, common actions like copy, paste, undo, and save are worth learning first since they apply across nearly every workflow.
Map2
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Zoom out | ⌘- |
| Zoom in | ⌘+ |
General7
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Hide Find My | ⌘H |
| Enter or exit full-screen view | ⌃⌘F |
| Hide everything except Find My | ⌥⌘H |
| Quit Find My | ⌘Q |
| Close the Find My window | ⌘W |
| Share My Location | ⇧⌘L |
| Minimize a window | ⌘M |
Frequently Asked Questions
Access Find My shortcuts from your menu bar
KeyShortcut detects the active app and shows its shortcuts instantly. No memorization needed.