Taphouse vs Applite: Full Homebrew GUI or Cask-Only App Store?
Applite is a free, open-source app that gives you an App Store-like experience for installing macOS applications through Homebrew Casks. It's clean, simple, and well-designed. But there's a catch: it only manages casks.
If you need to manage formulae, services, taps, or anything beyond GUI applications, Applite can't help. That's where Taphouse comes in — a complete Homebrew GUI that covers everything Homebrew can do.
The Key Difference: Scope
Applite
- GUI applications (casks)
- Browse by category
- Install / uninstall apps
- Batch updates
Taphouse
- All 14,000+ formulae
- All casks
- Services (databases, servers)
- Taps, dependencies, security
- Mac App Store + third-party
What Are Formulae vs Casks?
Formulae are command-line tools and libraries (node, python, git, ffmpeg, postgresql). Casks are GUI applications (Firefox, VS Code, Slack, Docker). If you're a developer, you almost certainly use both. Applite only handles casks — meaning your CLI tools, programming languages, and databases are invisible to it.
Full Feature Comparison
| Feature | Applite | Taphouse |
|---|---|---|
| Cask Management (GUI apps) | Yes | Yes |
| Formula Management (CLI tools) | No | Yes |
| App Store-Style Browsing | Yes | Yes (Discover) |
| Category Browsing | Yes | Yes |
| One-Click Install | Yes | Yes |
| Batch Updates | Yes | Yes |
| Service Management | No | Start/stop/restart |
| Tap Management | No | Yes (Pro) |
| Dependency Tracking | No | Interactive tree |
| CVE Security Scanner | No | Yes |
| Disk Usage Analysis | No | Per-package |
| Brew Doctor Diagnostics | No | Yes |
| Orphaned Dependency Cleanup | No | Yes (Pro) |
| Apple Silicon Migration | No | Yes (Pro) |
| Mac App Store Integration | No | Yes (Pro) |
| Third-Party App Updates | No | Sparkle + GitHub (Pro) |
| Adopt Existing Apps | No | Yes (Pro) |
| Brewfile Import/Export | No | Yes (Pro) |
| Menu Bar Mode | No | Yes (Pro) |
| Desktop Widgets | No | Yes |
| Scheduled Maintenance | No | Yes (Pro) |
| Package Tagging | No | Custom tags (Pro) |
| Multi-Language | English only | 6 languages |
| Open Source | Yes | No |
| Price | Free | Free + Pro at €9.99 |
When Applite's Cask-Only Approach Falls Short
You Can't See Half Your Packages
If you're a developer with node, python, git, postgresql, redis, ffmpeg, or any other CLI tool installed via Homebrew, Applite pretends they don't exist. Taphouse shows you everything — formulae and casks — in one interface.
No Service Management
Run PostgreSQL or Redis via brew services? Applite can't help you start, stop, or restart them. You'd still need the terminal. Taphouse gives you a full service management panel.
No System Health Tools
Brew Doctor diagnostics, CVE vulnerability scanning, orphaned dependency cleanup, disk usage analysis — Applite offers none of these. If something goes wrong with your Homebrew installation, you're back to the terminal.
No Migration or Backup
Setting up a new Mac? Applite can't export your setup. Taphouse's Brewfile import/export lets you back up and restore your entire Homebrew environment in one click.
What Applite Does Well
Credit where it's due — Applite nails its narrow scope:
- Clean App Store-like experience — If you just want to discover and install macOS GUI apps, Applite's browsing experience is polished and intuitive
- Free and open source — No cost, and the code is on GitHub for anyone to audit or contribute
- Focused simplicity — If you genuinely only care about casks, Applite stays out of the way
Taphouse Does Casks Too — Plus Everything Else
Everything Applite does with casks, Taphouse also does: browsing by category, one-click installs, batch updates, and a visual discover page for popular apps. The difference is Taphouse also handles formulae, services, taps, security, maintenance, App Store apps, third-party updates, and 15+ more features. You get the same cask experience plus the rest of Homebrew.
Who Should Use Applite?
Applite makes sense if:
- You only use Homebrew to install GUI apps (casks) and nothing else
- You never use formulae, services, or taps
- You want a completely free and open-source solution
- You prefer the simplest possible interface with no extra features
Who Should Use Taphouse?
Taphouse is the better choice if:
- You use any CLI tools or programming languages installed via Homebrew
- You run databases, servers, or other Homebrew services
- You want to manage your complete Homebrew setup from one app
- You care about security scanning, disk usage, or system health
- You want to manage App Store apps and third-party updates alongside Homebrew
- You're setting up a new Mac and want Brewfile backup/restore
The Verdict
Applite is a nice cask browser, but it's half a Homebrew GUI. If you use Homebrew for anything beyond installing GUI apps — CLI tools, programming languages, databases, development servers — you need a tool that sees the whole picture. Taphouse manages formulae, casks, services, taps, and more, while also offering security scanning, maintenance tools, and App Store integration that Applite doesn't touch. The free tier alone covers everything Applite does and then some.
Get the Complete Homebrew GUI
Taphouse manages your entire Homebrew setup — casks, formulae, services, and beyond. Free to start.
Download for macOSFrequently Asked Questions
Can I use both Applite and Taphouse?
Yes. They both read from the same Homebrew installation and won't conflict. You could use Applite for quick cask browsing and Taphouse for everything else — but most users find Taphouse covers all their needs.
Does Taphouse have an App Store-like browsing experience?
Yes. Taphouse's Discover section shows popular apps organized by category, similar to Applite's browsing experience. Plus, with Curated Collections (Pro), you get pre-built bundles for Web Dev, Data Science, DevOps, and more.
Is Taphouse free for cask management?
Yes. Browsing, installing, updating, and uninstalling casks is fully included in the free tier. Pro features add advanced capabilities like bulk operations, Brewfile backup, and Mac App Store integration.