A macOS app that watches your folders and moves files where they belong. Set a rule once. Never think about it again.
Download from App Store
// templates
Five built-in templates cover the most common use cases. Organize Downloads by file type. Auto-delete old DMGs. Clean your Desktop weekly. Sort by source URL. Or build your own rule from scratch.
// download source
Every file carries metadata. AutoShelf reads the download URL and can route files based on where they came from. GitHub repos to Developer/. Figma exports to Design/. Slack files to Work/. Your rules, your logic.
// downloaded by
Safari, Chrome, Arc, Finder. AutoShelf knows which app downloaded each file. Tag Safari downloads for review. Route Chrome extensions to a separate folder. Filter installers from your browser. Context matters.
// more features
Simple and focused. File type, extension, source URL, download app, size, age, or filename. One condition per rule keeps things clean and predictable.
Move, copy, rename, tag, or trash. Chain them together or keep it simple. Each action is explicit so you always know what happens.
AutoShelf lives in your menu bar, not your Dock. It watches your folders silently, takes action instantly, and stays out of your way.
// who is it for
Clone repos, download SDKs, save patches. Your Downloads folder is a crime scene. AutoShelf routes .zip, .tar, .css, .js to your dev workspace by source, type, or name.
RAW files, exports, client assets, mood boards. Everything lands in one pile. Sort by file type, size, or date into organized project folders.
You download everything. Installers from 2019. Duplicate PDFs. That zip you never opened. AutoShelf trashes what expires and archives what matters.
Invoices, contracts, deliverables, briefs. All mixed with memes and screenshots. Route documents to project folders, trash the noise, tag what needs review.
Lecture slides, readings, assignments, research papers. All dumped into Downloads. Auto sort by course, type, or semester without lifting a finger.
If you have ever spent 20 minutes looking for a file you downloaded yesterday, AutoShelf is for you. Set it up once. Forget it exists. Like it should be.