

As these are Mac-centric apps, the UI is quite different. Pages, for instance, is one of the best Word alternatives for Mac. These are Apple’s own alternatives to Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.
MAC OS X WORD ALTERNATIVE FREE
Apple needs to do a much better job promoting their own apps. Keynote comes pre-installed on Mac computers and is basically Apples answer to the ever popular Microsoft PowerPoint. Since its launch in 2013, Slack has quickly become the first name in business collaboration and messaging, and its free Mac app is the best way to keep in touch with your team. Included with your Mac is the iWork suite: Pages, Numbers, and Keynote. Not trying to make fun of you, just honestly surprised there are still people out there with Macs who don't know about Pages/Numbers/Keynote.

(I mean, Pages feels like such the obvious alternative to me that I'm almost a little dumbfounded that someone is actually asking this question, if I'm being perfectly honest. Even used it all through college, and, even with a writing heavy major, it served me perfectly well then, too. Highly recommended, been using it well since back when it still had the old icon. So, all that to say, imho Pages is the clear Word alternative for Mac, no contest. All you need is a web browser (Edge or Firefox will do) and sign in at. So even if you're away from your Mac, you can still access these apps and all your documents. Plus, Pages/Numbers/Keynote all have iOS counterparts and web app counterparts, and they all sync via iCloud. While the word processing app is available. The application automatically comes with most Apple products. And it's very well integrated for things like multi-tasking and collaboration, and it is frequently updated with new features and improvements. Pages is a free word processor developed by Apple. Pages is made by Apple, so it'll definitely look good and blend well UI-wise. It comes pre-installed with every version of macOS since I think Yosemite or El Capitan, so you should already have it. I mean, Pages (and Numbers and Keynote) should be the obvious, no-brainer alternative.
