PH

Photoshop Keyboard Shortcuts

120+ Adobe Photoshop keyboard shortcuts for Mac and Windows. Searchable, printable reference for selection, layers, brushes, and more.

129 shortcuts 11 categories

Selection

Action Shortcut
Select All
Deselect
Inverse Selection
Reselect
Quick Mask Mode
Refine Edge / Select and Mask
Add to Selection
Subtract from Selection
Load Layer as Selection
Stamp Visible to New Layer

Layers

Action Shortcut
Duplicate Layer
New Layer
Merge Down
Merge Visible
Group Layers
Ungroup Layers
Bring Forward
Send Backward
Bring to Front
Send to Back
Solo Layer Visibility
Create Clipping Mask
Delete Layer
New Layer (No Dialog)
Flatten & Stamp Visible

Tools

Action Shortcut
Move Tool
Marquee Tool
Lasso Tool
Magic Wand / Quick Selection
Crop Tool
Brush Tool
Eraser Tool
Gradient / Paint Bucket
Type Tool
Pen Tool
Eyedropper
Healing Brush / Spot Healing
Clone Stamp
Dodge / Burn / Sponge
Rotate View Tool
Hand Tool
Zoom Tool
Shape Tool
Path Selection Tool
3D Rotate Tool
3D Camera Tool
Swap Foreground / Background Colors
Default Colors (Black & White)

File

Action Shortcut
New Document
Open
Save
Save As
Save for Web (Legacy)
Close Document
Close All
Print
Export As
File Info

View

Action Shortcut
Zoom In
Zoom Out
Fit on Screen
100% Zoom (Actual Pixels)
Toggle Rulers
Toggle Grid
Toggle Guides
Show/Hide Extras
Toggle Path Display
Hide/Show All Panels
Hide/Show Side Panels
Cycle Screen Modes

Transform

Action Shortcut
Free Transform
Free Transform (Copy)
Apply Transform
Cancel Transform
Constrain Proportions
Transform from Center
Repeat Last Transform

Editing

Action Shortcut
Undo / Step Back
Redo / Step Forward
Copy
Paste
Cut
Paste in Place
Fill Dialog
Fill with Foreground Color
Fill with Background Color
Repeat Last Filter
Last Filter with Dialog
Fade Last Action

Adjustments

Action Shortcut
Levels
Curves
Hue / Saturation
Color Balance
Desaturate
Invert
Auto Levels
Auto Contrast
Auto Color
Black & White

Brushes

Action Shortcut
Decrease Brush Size
Increase Brush Size
Decrease Brush Hardness
Increase Brush Hardness
Set Brush Opacity (10-100%)
Set Brush Flow (10-100%)
Previous Brush
Next Brush
First Brush
Last Brush
Toggle Precise Cursor

Type

Action Shortcut
Increase Font Size
Decrease Font Size
Decrease Tracking
Increase Tracking
Align Text Left
Align Text Center
Align Text Right
Adjust Leading
Commit Text

Blending

Action Shortcut
Normal Blend Mode
Multiply Blend Mode
Screen Blend Mode
Overlay Blend Mode
Soft Light Blend Mode
Darken Blend Mode
Lighten Blend Mode
Difference Blend Mode
Color Blend Mode
Luminosity Blend Mode

Pro tips

Learn the Most-Used First

Don't try to memorize everything at once. Start with the 10-15 shortcuts you'd use every session: V (Move), B (Brush), Ctrl+Z (Undo), Ctrl+T (Transform), Ctrl+J (Duplicate Layer). Master these before expanding.

Practice by Forcing Yourself

The fastest way to learn shortcuts is to stop using menus entirely. Put a sticky note on your monitor listing 5 new shortcuts each week and force yourself to use them instead of clicking.

Learn the Bracket Keys

The [ and ] keys for brush size are the single most time-saving shortcut for painters and retouchers. Add Shift to control hardness. These alone can save you hours per project.

Customize What Doesn't Work

Go to Edit → Keyboard Shortcuts to reassign any shortcut. If a default combo feels awkward, change it. Many pros remap commonly used actions to single keys or easier combos.

Use Spring-Loaded Keys

Hold a tool's shortcut key temporarily to use it, then release to snap back to your previous tool. For example, hold H to pan, then release to go back to your brush. This is a massive workflow boost.

Print This Cheat Sheet

Having a physical reference next to your workspace is proven to help with memorization. Hit the Print button above and keep it next to your monitor until the shortcuts become muscle memory.

Frequently asked questions

What are the most important Photoshop shortcuts to learn first?

Start with these 10 essentials: V (Move), B (Brush), Ctrl/⌘+Z (Undo), Ctrl/⌘+T (Free Transform), Ctrl/⌘+J (Duplicate Layer), Ctrl/⌘+D (Deselect), Ctrl/⌘+S (Save), [ and ] (Brush Size), Ctrl/⌘+Shift+N (New Layer), and X (Swap Colors). These cover 80% of daily Photoshop work.

Are Photoshop shortcuts the same on Windows and Mac?

The logic is the same, but the modifier keys differ. Windows uses Ctrl, Alt, and Shift, while Mac uses ⌘ (Command), ⌥ (Option), and ⇧ (Shift). For example, Undo is Ctrl+Z on Windows and ⌘+Z on Mac. Use the platform toggle at the top of this page to see the correct keys for your system.

Can I create custom keyboard shortcuts in Photoshop?

Yes! Go to Edit → Keyboard Shortcuts (Alt+Shift+Ctrl+K on Windows, ⌥+⇧+⌘+K on Mac). You can reassign virtually any menu item, tool, or panel to a custom shortcut. You can also save and export your custom shortcut sets.

Why don't some shortcuts work in my version of Photoshop?

Some shortcuts were added or changed in recent versions. For example, Ctrl+Z was changed from 'Undo' (single step) to 'Multiple Undo' starting in Photoshop CC 2019. If a shortcut doesn't work, check Edit → Keyboard Shortcuts to see the current mapping in your version.

What's the difference between Ctrl+Z and Ctrl+Alt+Z?

In Photoshop CC 2019 and later, Ctrl/⌘+Z performs multiple undo (stepping back through history), and Ctrl/⌘+Shift+Z redoes. In older versions, Ctrl+Z only toggles the last action, and Ctrl+Alt+Z steps back through history.

How do blend mode shortcuts work?

Blend mode shortcuts use Shift+Alt (⇧+⌥ on Mac) plus a letter. For example, Shift+Alt+M for Multiply, Shift+Alt+S for Screen, Shift+Alt+O for Overlay. These only work when a layer (not a tool) is selected - if a painting tool is active, they change the tool's blend mode instead.

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