There are a lot of auto clicker tools out there. Most are Windows-first, several are barely maintained, and a handful are genuinely worth using. Here's what's actually good in 2025 — no fluff, just what each one does and when to use it.
Before You Pick One, Know What You Need
Most people grab the first result and then wonder why it doesn't do what they wanted. A few things to get clear on first:
Speed vs natural pacing. Gaming use cases need clicks per second. Presence management and work automation need slow, human-paced intervals. These are different requirements and often different tools.
Fixed coordinate vs area-based. A fixed coordinate clicks the same pixel every time. Area-based clicking picks a random point within a region you define. The latter is more flexible and uses less mechanical timing.
Randomisation. Fixed intervals at a fixed position are repetitive. If less mechanical behaviour matters, randomised timing and position matters.
Platform. Mac options are genuinely thinner than Windows. Most well-known auto clickers are Windows-only.
Windows Auto Clickers
OP Auto Clicker The most downloaded free auto clicker for Windows. Set a click interval, pick a position, start it with a hotkey. Does exactly what it says without fuss.
Good for: basic repetitive clicking, gaming, simple automation. Not good for: randomised timing or area-based targeting. Free: yes.
GS Auto Clicker Older and slightly clunkier interface than OP Auto Clicker, but it records and plays back click sequences. Useful when you need to automate a multi-step workflow rather than just repeat a single click.
Good for: recorded sequences, multi-step click automation. Not good for: anything needing less mechanical, randomised timing. Free: yes.
Free Auto Clicker (by Shocker) Lightweight, minimal, no setup required. Configurable down to milliseconds for fast clicking. Good if you just want something that works immediately.
Good for: quick setup, high-speed clicking. Not good for: sophisticated automation or presence management. Free: yes.
PowerToys Awake Not a dedicated auto clicker, but worth mentioning. Microsoft's free PowerToys suite includes the Awake module, which keeps your machine active without any mouse simulation — useful if all you need is to prevent sleep rather than generate actual clicks.
Good for: preventing system sleep and idle. Free: yes, part of PowerToys.
Mac Auto Clickers
Mac is harder. Apple's Accessibility permission requirements mean auto clickers need explicit approval, which has kept the category smaller. Here's what's worth using.
Green Dotter Built specifically for presence management for Slack, Teams, and Discord, where appropriate. Clicks within regions you define on screen, randomises both timing and position, pauses when you come back to the keyboard, and includes a keep-awake toggle. The most complete Mac auto clicker available for this specific job.
Good for: presence management, less mechanical automated clicks, controlled sessions. Not good for: high-speed gaming automation or complex multi-step sequences. Free: yes. Download at green-dotter.com.
Clicker for Mac (MurGaa) One of the few dedicated auto clicker apps built natively for Mac. Single and double clicks, configurable intervals, fixed coordinates. Basic but functional. Not frequently updated.
Good for: simple repetitive clicking on Mac. Not good for: randomised timing or presence management. Free: trial available, paid for full version.
Automator (built into macOS) Apple's own automation tool can simulate clicks as part of a larger workflow. More powerful than a dedicated clicker, but steeper learning curve and not designed for ongoing background clicking.
Good for: one-off automations, complex multi-step workflows. Not good for: running continuously in the background. Free: yes, built into macOS.
For Presence Management Specifically
If your goal is presence management for Slack, Teams, or Discord, where appropriate, most of the tools above won't really do the job. They'll click, but:
- Fixed coordinates means the same pixel every time — looks mechanical
- No randomisation means repetitive patterns
- No pause when you return means phantom clicks while you're actually working
- No scheduling means you have to remember to turn it off
Green Dotter is the tool in this list built for this job, on both Mac and Windows. It handles the randomisation, safe area targeting, pause-on-activity, and scheduling that presence management needs.
Quick Comparison
| Tool | Platform | Free | Randomised | Area-based | Pause on activity | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OP Auto Clicker | Windows | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | General clicking |
| GS Auto Clicker | Windows | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | Click sequences |
| Free Auto Clicker | Windows | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | Fast clicking |
| Green Dotter | Mac + Windows | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Presence management |
| Clicker for Mac | Mac | Trial | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | Basic Mac clicking |
| Automator | Mac | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | Complex workflows |
The Short Version
Windows general-purpose automation: OP Auto Clicker. Simple, free, reliable. Mac presence management: Green Dotter. Built for the job. Complex multi-step Mac automation: Automator. Everything else: check the table.
None of these need technical knowledge to set up. Most are running within five minutes.