Honest comparison
Pushcut builds actionable iOS notifications wired to Shortcuts and webhooks. Pushary is the agent-native, cross-platform approval layer: the agent asks, your phone decides, and policy plus an audit trail come built in.
If you live in Apple Shortcuts and want a visual toolkit to build actionable iOS notifications yourself, Pushcut is excellent. If you want an agent approval loop that already works, across platforms, with policy and a record, that is what Pushary is for.
Pushcut can show Approve and Deny and call a webhook, which is genuinely close. The gap is everything around it: the agent has to know to pause, call out for a decision, wait for the reply, and resume. Pushary ships that whole loop, including the one-command install into the agent and the decision page, so you are not the integration layer.
A Pushcut notification fires when your automation tells it to. Pushary lets you author the rules once: auto-approve safe reads, push on Bash, escalate git push, always deny rm -rf. The phone only buzzes for the decisions that matter, and the rule sticks across sessions and machines.
Pushcut is an Apple-only toolkit and does not keep a queryable approval log. Pushary delivers to any browser and device, and keeps an immutable, attributed, exportable trail of every question and human decision across every agent and machine, which is what a team or a compliance owner needs.
Pushcut is a deep, flexible automation toolkit for Apple devices, far beyond AI agents. If you want to build your own actionable notifications and live in Shortcuts, it is the better pick. Pushary makes the opposite bet: a ready-made, cross-platform agent approval layer with policy and audit, nothing to assemble.
| Feature | Pushary | Pushcut |
|---|---|---|
| Built-in ask-and-wait loop for the agentHITL | ||
| Per-tool permission policies (set rules once)POLICY | ||
| Immutable, exportable audit trailAUDIT | ||
| One-command install into Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Hermes | ||
| MCP server any agent can call | ||
| Works on Android, desktop, and the web | ||
| Actionable notifications with buttons | ||
| Notification buttons that call a webhook | ||
| Deep Apple Shortcuts / iOS automation | ||
| Price | $9.99/mo | Free tier + paid automation |
Pushcut is an iOS and watchOS app for rich, actionable notifications and automation, tightly integrated with Apple Shortcuts. You can build notifications with action buttons that run a Shortcut or call a webhook, and trigger them from an HTTP API or a server. It is a powerful tool for people who automate their life on Apple devices.
Pushcut is the most actionable of the simple notification tools: its buttons can call a webhook, so you can hand-build an approve and deny flow. But you build that loop yourself, on Apple devices, with no idea of which tool the agent is about to run. Pushary ships the loop: the agent asks, it blocks until you answer, and a policy you set once decides when to even ask. Pushary also runs cross-platform and keeps an audit trail. Pushcut is an iOS automation toolkit; Pushary is an agent-native approval layer.
You can get close. A Pushcut notification with Approve and Deny buttons that POST to a webhook can drive an approval, if you write the webhook, the waiting logic on the agent side, and the wiring in between. Pushary gives you that out of the box: a one-command install into the agent, the ask-and-wait call, the decision page, and the record, with nothing to assemble.
Pushcut is built for iOS, iPadOS, and watchOS and leans on Apple Shortcuts. If your team is on Android, Windows, or Linux, that is a hard limit. Pushary uses standards-based push to any browser and device, plus an optional installable app, so the same approval reaches whoever is on call regardless of platform.
Yes. They are independent. If you live in Apple Shortcuts you might keep Pushcut for personal automations and use Pushary for the agent-specific work: the ask-and-wait approvals, per-tool policy, the kill switch, the cross-platform reach, and the audit trail.
Set your guardrails once, approve from your phone, and keep an exportable audit trail. Works with Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Hermes, and any MCP client. 7-day free trial.