Subscriptions start at $40, and there's a free trial available so you can test it before committing. Many times they just work, and those that don't work perfectly might work well enough for your purposes. Not only is CrossOver compatible with thousands of Windows applications, but you can also try installing unknown and untested Windows application into it. Prefer a commercial application? No problems. WineBottler is fully compatible with OS X 10.11 El Capitan. Wine itself doesn't offer an OS X download, but the third-party application WineBottler brings everything Wine has to offer to the Mac. Wine is far from perfect, and can't handle every Windows app, but it still offers pretty broad support for a whole range of Windows applications. This is a program - actually, it's a compatibility layer, but that's rather a mouthful - that has its roots in Linux, but also works on OS X. If youre on macOS, you can run brew install -cask flipper to let homebrew manage. Here I'm going to look at two applications - one free, one a commercial product - that will allow you to do just that. Simply download the latest build for Mac, Linux or Windows and launch it. Windows runs great on a Mac, but if you only need to run a few specific Windows application on your Mac, then you might be able to do just that without needing to go to the expense or hassle of installing Windows on it.