Mac Storage Cleanup: How to Identify Large Files and Optimize Space on macOS Mac storage cleanup helps you find large files, clear caches, and optimize macOS storage safely to keep your Mac fast and responsive.

A Mac settings window displays Mac Storage Cleanup details for "Macintosh HD," showing used and available space, storage recommendations, and a breakdown of space used by applications, documents, and other file types.
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Storage issues rarely appear overnight. They build gradually. A few downloaded installers remain unused. Old project folders sit untouched. Temporary files accumulate. Cached data expands in the background.

macOS provides built-in tools to examine this growth without installing additional software. The first step is understanding where space is being used.

System Settings > General > Storage

This panel categorizes storage into applications, documents, photos, system data, and more. Clicking into each section reveals what consumes the most space.

Identifying Large Files

Large files often account for the majority of lost storage. Video projects, disk images, archived backups, and duplicated downloads may sit unnoticed.

Inside the Storage panel, selecting Documents reveals a breakdown sorted by size. Files can be reviewed and removed directly from there.

Finder also offers a manual approach. Open Finder, then select the internal drive and use the search bar with filters such as “File Size is greater than” to locate unusually large items. Sorting by size immediately surfaces space-consuming files.

Deleting large files should always involve verification. Some may belong to active applications or ongoing work. Moving uncertain files to an external drive instead of permanent deletion provides a safer alternative.

Clearing Cache Files Carefully

Cache files help applications load faster. They are temporary by design, but over time they can grow significantly.

To review user-level caches, open Finder and select:

Go > Go to Folder > ~/Library/Caches

Inside, folders correspond to installed applications. Deleting contents of individual cache folders can free space, but the folders themselves should remain intact.

macOS recreates cache files when needed. Clearing them may slow the first launch of certain apps but does not damage the system when done correctly.

System-level caches reside in a separate Library directory and should not be removed casually. Unless there is a specific troubleshooting reason, focusing on user-level caches is sufficient.

A Mac Finder window shows a search for “_library/Caches” to assist with Mac Storage Cleanup, with file path suggestions highlighted. The background is blurred blue and white, featuring an Apple logo in the lower right corner.
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Optimizing Built-In Storage Tools

macOS includes storage optimization options that automate certain cleanup tasks.

System Settings > General > Storage > Recommendations

Here you may see options such as enabling Optimize Storage, which automatically removes watched Apple TV content or older email attachments when space runs low.

Reviewing the Trash is another simple but often overlooked step. Files remain there until emptied manually.

Right-click Trash > Empty Trash

Large files in the Trash still occupy disk space until removed permanently.

Managing System Data

The “System Data” category often appears large and undefined. It includes logs, caches, temporary files, and system support data.

Some growth in this category is normal. However, if System Data expands unusually, restarting the Mac can clear temporary logs and swap files.

In certain cases, Time Machine local snapshots contribute to storage use. These snapshots allow recovery even when the backup drive is disconnected.

To review snapshots, open Terminal and enter:

tmutil listlocalsnapshots /

Advanced users can remove older snapshots through Terminal commands, but doing so requires caution.

A Mac Storage Cleanup window displays disk usage by category, including Applications, Documents, Cloud Drive, Photos, and Trash. The background is blurred blue with a small Apple logo in the lower right corner.
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Applications and Unused Software

Applications accumulate over time, especially trial software and utilities no longer needed.

System Settings > General > Storage > Applications

Sorting by size highlights larger apps. Removing unused software often frees significant space.

Dragging an app to the Trash removes it, but associated support files may remain in the Library folder. For most users, removing the main application is sufficient unless troubleshooting specific issues.

Desktop and Downloads

The Desktop and Downloads folders frequently hold forgotten files. Sorting these folders by size helps reveal items that can be archived or deleted.

Finder > View > Show View Options

Selecting “Calculate all sizes” provides accurate folder size details.

Keeping these two folders organized reduces repeated storage growth.

A macOS "Desktop" customization window with options for icon view, sorting, icon size, grid spacing, text size, label position, background settings, and quick Mac Storage Cleanup. The Apple logo appears in the bottom-right corner.
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External Storage and Cloud Integration

When local storage remains tight, moving rarely used files to an external drive is a straightforward solution. For users who rely on iCloud Drive, enabling desktop and documents syncing shifts older files to cloud storage while leaving placeholders locally.

System Settings > Apple ID > iCloud > iCloud Drive

Optimizing storage through iCloud does not delete files but stores less-used items online until accessed again.

Routine Maintenance

Mac storage cleanup works best as periodic maintenance rather than emergency intervention. Reviewing large files monthly prevents sudden capacity issues.

Deleting unnecessary installers after software updates, emptying the Trash regularly, and clearing unused downloads reduce buildup over time.

macOS is designed to manage storage efficiently, but it does not automatically remove everything. Identifying large files, clearing safe cache locations, reviewing applications, and using built-in optimization tools keep storage balanced without compromising system stability.

Jack
About the Author

Jack is a journalist at AppleMagazine, covering technology, digital culture, and the fast changing relationship between people and platforms. With a background in digital media, his work focuses on how emerging technologies shape everyday life, from AI and streaming to social media and consumer tech.