Most interesting in Clipboard Tools

Free
Preserve a clip history so that you can reuse it in the future.
Free
This Mac app helps you keep track of your clippings.
Free
A simple utility that records your "copy" and "cut" activities.
Free
iCopy is a system utility that keeps track of what you put in your clipboard.
This program helps you manage your clipboard entries.

Top rated in Clipboard Tools

SimplePastie
Free

SimplePastie allows you to paste your clipboard to various sites pasteboards

ClipDoubler
Free

A useful application that provides unlimited clipboards.

Passenger
Free

Create accounts and passwords for server environments.

Clipboard Evolved
Free

Organize your data easily with a user-friendly clipboard.

Clyppan
Free

Clipboard manager and history app that is always at your fingertips.

Savvy Clipboard
Free

Savvy Clipboard will remember what you copied, and store those clippings for you.

Pasta
Free

Preserves your clippings so you can reuse them later.

Plain Paste
Free

Streamline your word processing workflow: copy, click, paste without formatting.

Hiide
Free

Hide everything from your desktop with just a click.

PasteBox
Free

PasteBox is a simple clipboard manager designed for Mac.

xClipboard
Free

This Menu Bar application is a clipboard manager for Mac.

Clipboard Center
Free

Keep a history of the items you copy to the clipboard.

Collective
Free

Organize your content for Clipboard management.

Characters
Free

Characters makes it easy for writers, designers and developers to access special characters.

iCopy
Free

iCopy is a system utility that keeps track of what you put in your clipboard.

Scrapbook
Free

Store hundreds of items, including images, text, and sound clippings.

rePasta
Free

This program is a helpful clipboard assistant for Mac.

Pasteboard Recorder 3E
Free

This program helps you manage your clipboard entries.

Snipper
Free

Snipper is a small utility which enables you to paste text Snippets.

ClipDoubler Free
Free

The Macintosh Clipboard - it's simple, it's elegant, it's a core element of the Mac computing experience.  Why should there be only one?