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Prices · Solana · 18 min read

How to show the live SOL price in your Mac's notch

S
SOLANA · SOL / USD
$214.06
+3.42% 24h Live
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The short version

Install CoinNotch, pin Solana from the coin picker, and the live SOL price sits in your menu bar next to the notch, refreshing about once a second. It is free, runs natively on Apple Silicon and Intel, reads public market data only, and never touches a wallet. The rest of this guide covers how the price feed works, which SOL number you are looking at, how to add alerts and a multi-coin watchlist, and what the app does to stay light on battery.

There is a strip of screen on every modern MacBook that almost nothing uses. The notch carved out space on either side of the camera, and macOS mostly leaves those pixels to the menu bar icons you already had. For anyone who keeps half an eye on crypto through the day, that strip is the most valuable real estate on the machine, because it is always visible and you never have to go looking for it.

CoinNotch puts the Solana price there. Not in a window you open, not in a widget you swipe to, not in a browser tab competing with thirty others. The price lives in the bar, updates roughly once a second, and changes color as SOL moves so you read direction before you read the number. This guide walks through the full setup and then goes deeper than most people need, into where the number comes from, how it is calculated, and what trade-offs the app makes so it does not drain your battery or your privacy.

Why the menu bar beats every other way to watch SOL

Most people check a coin price one of three ways. They open an exchange app, they pull up a chart site in the browser, or they drop a widget on the desktop or in Notification Center. Each one carries a cost that feels small in the moment and adds up over a day.

Opening Coinbase or a chart on CoinGecko means a context switch. You leave what you were doing, wait for a page or a view to load, read the figure, then find your way back to the document or the terminal you were in. Researchers who study task switching put the cost of a single interruption at well over twenty seconds of refocus time, and that is before you count the times the tab pulls you into ten minutes of scrolling. A desktop widget is closer, but it still sits behind whatever window you have open, so you minimize or swipe to see it. The menu bar is the only surface that is always on top, across every app, every Space, and every fullscreen video.

That is the whole argument for a menu-bar ticker. The price stops being something you fetch and becomes something you glance at, the same way you glance at the clock or the battery indicator. The cognitive load drops to near zero, and the number is there in your peripheral vision when SOL does something worth noticing.

Worth knowing: the notch does not change how a menu-bar app works. macOS treats the area beside the notch as ordinary menu-bar space, so CoinNotch sits there like any status item. On Macs without a notch, the price simply appears in the menu bar as usual. The notch is the visual hook, not a technical requirement.

Setting up a live SOL ticker, step by step

The setup is deliberately short. There is no onboarding wizard, no account creation, and nothing to connect. From download to a live SOL price in the bar is about two minutes, most of which is the download itself.

1

Download and move to Applications

Grab the build from coinnotch.app or install through Setapp. Drag the app into your Applications folder and open it. On first launch macOS may ask you to confirm you want to open it, which is standard for any app downloaded outside the App Store.

2

Pin Solana

Click the CoinNotch status item, open the coin picker, and type SOL or Solana. Select it and it pins to the bar immediately. The picker searches across more than two hundred assets by ticker or full name.

3

Set your display preference

Choose whether the bar shows the bare price, the price with a percentage change, or a compact symbol-and-price chip. If you pin several coins, pick whether they cycle automatically or sit side by side.

4

Click to expand

A click on the SOL chip opens a small panel with a sparkline, the 24-hour high and low, market cap, and the percentage move. This is the detail view, and it is where the timeframe toggle lives.

That is the entire flow. Once SOL is pinned, the app remembers it across restarts, and you can add it to your login items so the ticker is in the bar from the moment you sign in. There is no separate configuration file to edit and no command line involved, though power users will find a few extra toggles in preferences that we get to later.

How the price feed works

This is the part most ticker apps gloss over, and it is the part that decides whether you can trust the number. A price on screen is only as good as the pipe that feeds it, so it is worth understanding what happens between an exchange matching engine and the digits next to your notch.

Aggregated market data, not a single exchange

Solana trades on dozens of venues at once, and the price is never identical across all of them. Binance might print SOL at 214.10 while Coinbase shows 214.02 and a smaller venue lags at 213.80. Quoting any single exchange means inheriting that venue's quirks, its outages, and its thin-liquidity moments. CoinNotch instead reads an aggregated feed that blends prices across major exchanges, weighted by trading volume, so the number you see reflects the broad market rather than one order book.

A volume-weighted average price, or VWAP, leans the blended figure toward the venues where most of the real trading happens. If ninety percent of SOL volume in a given window clears on three large exchanges, those three dominate the number, and a tiny illiquid market that prints a stale 213.50 barely moves it. This is the same methodology the large data sites use, and it is why the figure in your bar tracks what you see on CoinGecko or CoinMarketCap closely rather than matching any one exchange tick for tick.

Polling, intervals, and what "one second" means

CoinNotch polls its data source on an interval and updates the bar when a new figure arrives. The default sits around one second, which is fast enough that the price feels live without hammering the network. You are not getting a raw websocket firehose of every trade, and for a glanceable ticker you would not want one. A sub-second flood of ticks would burn battery and tell you nothing a human eye could use. The one-second cadence is the balance between feeling real time and being responsible with resources.

When SOL moves between two polls, the digits in the bar flick green or red briefly to signal direction. That micro-animation is doing real work. It lets you register that the price went up without reading the figure at all, which is the entire point of a peripheral display.

If you have ever wondered why a ticker shows a slightly different number than the exact last trade on your exchange, this is why. Your exchange shows its own last trade. An aggregator shows the blended market. Neither is wrong, they answer different questions. For watching the market, the blend is the more honest answer.

What happens when the network drops

Connections fail. Wi-Fi drops, you close the lid, a coffee shop router throttles you. CoinNotch handles this gracefully rather than showing a frozen number that looks live but is minutes stale. When a poll fails, the app marks the price as stale after a short grace period and dims the indicator, so you can tell at a glance that you are looking at the last known figure rather than a current one. As soon as the connection returns, polling resumes and the dimmed state clears. A stale price you know is stale is fine. A stale price pretending to be live is dangerous, and the app is built to never do the second thing.

Which SOL price you are seeing

The number in your bar is a spot price in your chosen fiat currency, by default US dollars. Spot means the current market price for immediate settlement, as opposed to a futures or perpetual price that bakes in funding and expiry. For almost everyone watching SOL through the day, spot is the right number, and it is what every mainstream price source shows by default.

You can switch the quote currency in preferences. If you think in euros, pounds, yen, or any of the major fiats, the bar quotes SOL against that currency, and the conversion uses live FX rates rather than a stale daily fixing. The percentage change is calculated over a rolling 24-hour window by default, which matches the convention every major data site uses, so a "+3.42%" in your bar means the same thing as "+3.42%" on CoinGecko.

What you seeWhat it meansSource
SOL priceVolume-weighted spot across major exchangesAggregated market feed
24h changeMove over a rolling 24-hour windowSame feed, computed client-side
24h high / lowExtremes within the rolling windowAggregated market feed
Market capCirculating supply times spot priceFeed supply data times price
SparklineRecent price path over the chosen timeframeHistorical series from the feed

The market cap figure deserves one note. It uses circulating supply, the SOL in the market, not total or fully diluted supply. That is the standard convention, but it is worth knowing that the "fully diluted valuation" you sometimes see quoted elsewhere uses a different supply number and will be larger. CoinNotch shows circulating-supply market cap because that is the figure comparable across coins and consistent with how the broad market is quoted.

Put SOL in your notch, free

macOS 13 and later. Apple Silicon and Intel. No account, no wallet, no tracking.

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Tracking more than just SOL

Most people who pin Solana also want to keep an eye on Bitcoin and Ethereum, and often a fourth or fifth coin they hold. CoinNotch handles a watchlist in two ways, and which one you want depends on how much menu-bar space you are willing to give up.

Cycle mode

In cycle mode the bar shows one coin at a time and rotates through your list on an interval you set, the same way airport departure boards rotate flights. This keeps the footprint tiny, a single price chip, while still surfacing every coin you track. Set the rotation to a few seconds and your whole watchlist passes through your peripheral vision without you doing anything. This is the mode most people settle on once they pin more than two coins.

Side-by-side mode

If you have the bar space and want everything visible at once, side-by-side mode lays your coins out as a row of compact chips. SOL, BTC, ETH, all live, all at the same time. The trade-off is real estate. On a 13-inch MacBook with a busy menu bar you will run out of room fast, so this mode suits larger displays or sparse menu bars. The expanded panel still works the same way, click any coin to see its chart and stats.

Reordering is drag and drop inside the picker, so the coin you care about most can sit first in the rotation or leftmost in the row. The order persists across restarts along with the rest of your setup.

Setting SOL price alerts that respect your attention

A live ticker tells you where SOL is right now. Alerts tell you when it crosses a line you care about, so you can stop watching and let the app watch for you. CoinNotch supports two kinds, and both fire as native macOS notifications rather than anything intrusive.

Threshold alerts

A threshold alert fires when SOL crosses a fixed price in either direction. Set one at 250 and you get a quiet notification the moment SOL trades above it. Set another at 180 and you are warned if it falls through. These are the alerts to use when you have a level in mind, a target you would sell into or a floor you would buy at, and you do not want to stare at the bar waiting for it.

Percentage-move alerts

For a volatile asset like Solana, the absolute price often matters less than the size of the move. A percentage alert fires when SOL moves more than a chosen amount inside 24 hours, say plus or minus eight percent. This catches the days that matter, the sharp rallies and the sudden drops, without you setting and resetting price targets as the market drifts. It is the alert most active traders leave on.

On notification fatigue: the fastest way to start ignoring alerts is to set too many. Pick the one level or the one percentage that would change what you do, and leave the rest off. An alert you act on is worth a hundred you swipe away.

Battery, memory, and staying out of the way

A menu-bar app earns its place by being invisible in every way except the one you want. If a ticker noticeably drains your battery or shows up near the top of Activity Monitor, it has failed, no matter how nice it looks. CoinNotch is built as a native macOS app rather than a web view wrapped in a window, and that choice drives everything about its footprint.

A native status-bar app holds a tiny resident memory footprint, typically a few tens of megabytes, against the hundreds an Electron-style wrapper would carry by shipping an entire browser engine just to render a price. The polling loop is the only meaningful background work, and a one-second network poll for a small JSON payload is trivial. When your Mac sleeps, polling pauses. When you are on battery, the app can back off its interval automatically if you enable the low-power option, stretching the poll to a few seconds so the radio wakes less often. The visible cost on a normal workday is negligible, and you can confirm that yourself in Activity Monitor under the Energy tab.

The app also respects your system appearance. In dark mode the chip blends into the dark menu bar, in light mode it adapts, and the colors that signal up and down moves stay legible against both. None of this is configurable busywork, it just follows macOS the way a native app should.

Privacy and security, in plain terms

This matters more for a crypto app than almost any other category, because the space is full of tools that want your wallet, your keys, or your trading history. CoinNotch wants none of it, and the reason is structural rather than a promise. The app only needs one thing to do its job, a public price, and a public price requires nothing from you.

  • No account. There is no signup, no email, no login. The app has nothing to authenticate because it stores nothing about you.
  • No wallet connection. CoinNotch never asks to connect a wallet, never requests a seed phrase or private key, and has no feature that would use one. It reads prices, it does not touch balances.
  • No tracking. The app does not build a profile, does not sell data, and does not embed third-party analytics that follow you around. The only network calls it makes are to fetch prices.

The practical upshot is that the worst case for a price ticker is bounded. Even if you are maximally paranoid, the app simply cannot leak what it never collects. That is the right security model for something that lives in your menu bar all day, and it is a deliberate design choice rather than a policy you have to take on faith.

A good rule for any crypto tool: if a price-display app ever asks to connect your wallet or sign a transaction, close it. Showing a price never requires either. CoinNotch is built so the question never comes up.

What macOS permissions it asks for, and why

A fair question for any menu-bar app is what system permissions it requests, because that is where the real privacy surface lives on a Mac. CoinNotch is deliberately thin here. It needs network access to fetch prices, which is implicit for any app that talks to the internet and is not a special grant you approve. It does not request Accessibility access, which would let an app read or control other windows. It does not request Full Disk Access, Screen Recording, the microphone, the camera, your contacts, or your location. If you open System Settings and look at the privacy panes, CoinNotch should be absent from the sensitive ones, because it has no reason to be there.

This is worth checking yourself rather than taking on trust, and it is easy to verify. Open System Settings, go to Privacy and Security, and walk through Accessibility, Full Disk Access, and Screen Recording. An app that only shows prices has no business in any of them, and you can confirm that in about thirty seconds. The absence of those requests is the clearest signal that an app does only what it claims.

Where your settings are stored

Your pinned coins, display preferences, and alert levels are stored locally on your Mac in the standard preferences location, the same place every native app keeps its settings. They are not synced to a server you do not control, because there is no server holding your account, because there is no account. If you move to a new Mac you re-pin your coins, which takes under a minute, and the trade-off for that small inconvenience is that your watchlist never leaves your machine. For a tool whose entire pitch is privacy, keeping configuration local rather than cloud-synced is the consistent choice.

A quick glossary for reading the panel

When you click the SOL chip and the detail panel opens, it shows a handful of numbers that are standard across crypto data but worth defining plainly if you are newer to the space. None of these are CoinNotch-specific, they are the common vocabulary of market data, and understanding them makes every price site more legible, not just this one.

  • Spot price. The current market price for immediate settlement. The headline number in the bar.
  • 24h change. How much the price has moved over the trailing twenty-four hours, shown as a percentage. The convention everyone uses for a quick sense of the day.
  • 24h high and low. The highest and lowest prices SOL touched in that same trailing window. Together they show the day's range, and where the current price sits inside it tells you a lot at a glance.
  • Market cap. Circulating supply multiplied by the spot price. A rough measure of the asset's total size, useful for comparing coins against each other.
  • Volume. How much SOL has traded in the window. High volume on a move means conviction behind it, low volume means the move is easier to fade.
  • Sparkline. The small line chart of recent price. It shows shape and trend, not exact values, and the timeframe toggle changes how far back it reaches.

Read together, these turn a single number into a small story. A SOL price near its 24-hour high on rising volume reads very differently from the same price near its low on fading volume, and the panel gives you both in one click without sending you to a separate chart site.

What moves the SOL price you are watching

A ticker is only useful if you understand what the number reflects, so it is worth a short detour into why Solana's price moves the way it does. The figure in your bar is the live consensus of thousands of buyers and sellers, and that consensus shifts for reasons that fall into a few broad buckets. None of this is trading advice, it is context that makes the number meaningful instead of mysterious.

Network activity and demand for blockspace

Solana is a high-throughput chain, and a meaningful share of its price story is tied to how much the network is used. When activity spikes, when a popular token launch, a busy NFT mint, or a surge in decentralized-exchange volume fills blocks, demand for SOL to pay fees and to participate rises with it. Sustained high usage tends to support the price because it signals the chain is doing real work rather than sitting idle. Traders watch on-chain metrics like daily active addresses, transaction counts, and total value locked in Solana protocols as leading signals, and those metrics often move before the price does. You do not need to track them to use CoinNotch, but knowing they exist explains why SOL can rally on a quiet news day, the chain underneath it got busier.

Staking, supply, and the float that is liquid

A large portion of all SOL is staked, locked up by holders who run or delegate to validators in exchange for yield. Staked SOL is not sitting on exchanges ready to sell, which means the liquid supply, the float that sets the price at the margin, is smaller than the total supply suggests. When staking rates rise, less SOL is available to trade, and the same amount of buying pressure moves the price further. This is part of why market cap based on circulating supply can be a slightly blunt instrument for a heavily staked asset. The number in your bar still reflects real trades, it is just worth knowing that the order books behind it are thinner than the headline supply figure implies.

Macro and the crypto correlation

Solana does not trade in a vacuum. On most days it moves with the broader crypto market, and the broader crypto market increasingly moves with macro conditions, interest-rate expectations, dollar strength, and risk appetite across equities. Bitcoin still sets the tone for the whole asset class, so a sharp BTC move usually drags SOL with it, sometimes amplified because SOL is higher beta, meaning it tends to move more than Bitcoin in both directions. This is exactly why so many CoinNotch users pin BTC alongside SOL. Watching the two together tells you whether a SOL move is Solana-specific news or just the tide moving every boat.

A practical read: if SOL is up four percent and BTC is flat, something Solana-specific is probably driving it. If SOL is up four percent and BTC is up four percent, you are watching the market, not the coin. Pinning both turns your menu bar into a quick way to tell those two situations apart.

Liquidity, slippage, and why the spot price is not the price you would get

One subtlety worth internalizing is that the spot price in your bar is the price for a marginal trade, the next small buy or sell. It is not necessarily the price you would get for a large order. Move enough size and you walk up or down the order book, paying progressively worse prices, which is slippage. For someone glancing at SOL through the day this rarely matters, but it is the reason a whale selling can crater the displayed price in seconds while your own small sell would have barely moved it. The ticker shows the current clearing price, not a guarantee of execution at that price for any size.

Every way to watch SOL on a Mac, compared

CoinNotch is one option among several, and an honest guide should lay out the alternatives so you can decide what fits. Here is how the realistic ways to keep an eye on Solana stack up against each other.

MethodAlways visibleEffort to checkBest for
Menu-bar tickerYesZero, it is a glanceAll-day passive watching
Exchange appNoOpen app, find pairPlacing real trades
Browser tabNoSwitch tab, wait for loadDeep research sessions
Desktop widgetPartly, sits behind windowsMinimize or swipePeople who work from the desktop
Phone appNo, different devicePick up phone, unlockAway from the Mac

The menu-bar approach wins specifically on the all-day passive case, which is what most people do. You are not trading SOL forty times a day, you are working and occasionally wondering where it is. For that, a glance beats every other option because it costs nothing. The exchange app and the browser tab are better when you have a reason to go deep, placing an order, reading the order book, studying a chart. The two are complementary rather than competing. Most CoinNotch users keep the ticker for the ninety-nine glances and open their exchange for the one trade.

Why not just use a phone

Phones are where many people first check prices, and they are fine for that. The problem is friction and distraction. Picking up your phone to check SOL means unlocking it, opening an app, and then somehow ending up in messages or a feed ten minutes later. The phone is a portal to everything, which makes it a terrible single-purpose price display. The menu bar shows you one number and shows you nothing else, which is exactly the discipline you want from a tool that lives in front of you all day.

Customizing what the bar shows

The default display is sensible, but a few preferences are worth knowing because they change how much information the bar carries without taking more space.

Compact versus verbose

The most compact display is just the price, four or five characters that disappear into the bar. Add the percentage change and you get direction and magnitude at the cost of a few more pixels. Add the ticker symbol and the chip becomes self-explanatory to anyone glancing at your screen, useful if you pin several coins. Most people start verbose and trim down to price-plus-percentage once they are used to reading the chip.

Precision and rounding

For a coin priced in the low hundreds like SOL, two decimal places is the natural choice, the cents matter and the figure stays short. For a sub-dollar coin you want more decimals to see movement at all, and for a five-figure coin like BTC you want none, because nobody needs the cents on a ninety-thousand-dollar number cluttering the bar. CoinNotch picks sensible defaults per coin and lets you override them, so you are never stuck with a price that is either uselessly imprecise or needlessly long.

Color behavior

By default the price flicks green on an up-tick and red on a down-tick, then settles back to neutral. You can switch to a persistent color that stays green while the 24-hour change is positive and red while it is negative, which gives you the day's direction at a constant glance rather than only on movement. Which you prefer comes down to whether you care more about momentary ticks or the overall day, and both are one toggle away.

When the SOL price will not update

Tickers are simple, so when something goes wrong it is usually one of a few things. Here is the order to check.

  1. Check the network first. If the indicator is dimmed and the price looks stale, the app has lost its connection. Confirm Wi-Fi is up and reachable, then watch for the indicator to brighten as polling resumes. This fixes most "frozen price" reports on its own.
  2. Confirm the app is allowed to run in the background. If macOS App Nap or a Low Power setting is aggressively suspending the app, polling can stall. Make sure CoinNotch is permitted to run and, if you are on battery, that the low-power back-off is not stretched longer than you expected.
  3. Re-pin the coin. If SOL vanished from the bar after a macOS update, open the picker and pin it again. Major OS updates occasionally reset menu-bar item state, and re-pinning restores it instantly.

If the price is still stuck after all three, quitting and relaunching the app clears any wedged connection state, and your pinned coins and settings survive the restart. A full guide to each of these lives in the troubleshooting section of the blog.

Frequently asked questions

How do I show the SOL price in my Mac's notch?
Download CoinNotch, open it, search for Solana in the coin picker, and pin it. The live price appears in your menu bar beside the notch within a few seconds. No account or wallet is required.
How often does the SOL price update?
About once per second by default, from an aggregated market feed, so the figure is effectively real time. You can stretch the interval to save battery if you prefer.
Is CoinNotch free?
Yes, it is free on macOS 13 Ventura and later, on both Apple Silicon and Intel Macs. It is also available through Setapp.
Does CoinNotch connect to my Solana wallet?
No. It reads public price data only and never connects to a wallet, requests keys, or asks you to log in.
Which SOL price does it show, and why does it differ slightly from my exchange?
It shows a volume-weighted average across major exchanges, not a single venue. Your exchange shows its own last trade, which is why the two can differ by a few cents. The aggregated figure tracks the broad market the way CoinGecko and CoinMarketCap do.
Can I track Bitcoin and Ethereum at the same time?
Yes. Pin as many coins as you like and choose cycle mode, which rotates them through one chip, or side-by-side mode, which shows them all at once if you have the menu-bar space.