Skip to main content

The new macOS update includes a battery boost for Safari

Laptop showing the macos 15.5 update.
Willow Roberts / Digital Trends

The macOS 15.5 update is here, and it’s overall pretty light on features. However, the Safari 18.5 update bundled with it does include a new developer feature that will save battery life for users. “ Declarative Web Push ” is a more efficient approach to web notifications that will drain less battery every time you get a notification on Safari.

The feature already came to iOS and iPadOS in the last update, allowing developers to swap their notification implementations to the simpler JSON format. Just for fun, here’s what it looks like:

Recommended Videos
{
  "web_push": 8030,
  "notification": {
      "title": "Webkit.org — Meet Declarative Web Push",
      "lang": "en-US",
      "dir": "ltr",
      "body": "Send push notifications without JavaScript or service worker!",
      "navigate": "https://webkit.org/blog/16535/meet-declarative-web-push/",
      "silent": false,
      "app_badge": "1"
  }
}

If you automatically click “NO!” every time a website asks to send you notifications, this little perk may not affect you at all. If you do allow a few of your favorite sites to send you notifications, this new system will make sure your notifications are reliable and timely — even when you haven’t opened the target website in a while — without making your Mac work too hard. Because Declarative Web Push doesn’t require Service Workers, it’s also easier for developers to use and more private by design.

If you didn’t even know that websites could send you notifications, the concept is pretty simple. Just like apps on your phone send you notifications about new content, promotions, and updates, you can choose to let websites do the same.

If you accept notifications from a news site, it’ll tell you about trending stories and new posts. If you accept notifications from an online store, it’ll probably tell you about sales and promotional deals. Some people like them, other people hate them — it’s really a matter of preference.

If you’re not running macOS Sequoia, you can still get this Safari update on macOS Sonoma and macOS Ventura as well. If you were hoping for more features in this latest update, don’t be too disappointed — WWDC 2025 is under a month away now, which means we’ll get our first look at macOS 16 .

Willow Roberts
Willow Roberts has been a Computing Writer at Digital Trends for a year and has been writing for about a decade. She has a…
8 key things you need to know from Apple’s WWDC 2025 event
From a fresh look and updated names, to new features, more intelligence and live translation
iOS 26, iPadOS 26 and macOS 26 shown on devices.

The WWDC 2025 keynote ran for just over an hour and a half. For those of you who don't fancy sitting through the whole presentation, we've pulled out the key things you need to know from the latest Apple event.

1. Welcome to the 26 club

Read more
Why macOS Tahoe is a big deal for Intel Macs
Apple unveiling macOS Tahoe at WWDC 2025.

Apple’s WWDC event kicked off on Monday with the usual slew of fresh announcements and updates showcasing the company’s software plans for the year ahead.

And as with every WWDC keynote, the upcoming shift to new software also signaled diminishing support for older Apple devices.

Read more
These two macOS 26 features would transform the way I use my Mac
Writing tools in Apple Notes.

Apple’s execution with note-taking on macOS leaves a lot of room for improvement. There are so many areas where it feels like an abandoned project, instead of the future-proof experience that native iOS apps often deliver. In fact, the disparity across its own platforms is troubling.

Take, for example, iPadOS and iOS. You can quickly launch a notes page straight from the control, without having to close the existing app and launch the Notes app. On macOS, you don’t get any such facility.

Read more