Free up gigabytes, reclaim speed, and keep your system healthy β with a step-by-step cleanup that actually works.
System caches, log files, old iOS backups, Xcode simulators β they accumulate silently. Let's find them.
User caches are the safest thing to delete β apps rebuild them automatically. This folder alone can hold 10β30 GB.
Go through your Downloads folder and delete anything you no longer need. Right-click the Trash and select Empty Trash.
Tip: Sort Downloads by Date Added to spot old clutter fast.
macOS writes diagnostic logs constantly. Clearing them is completely safe and can free several gigabytes.
iTunes/Finder backups of old iPhones or iPads can eat 10β50 GB. Remove them via Finder β Preferences β Devices, or delete from iCloud.
Use Storage Manager (Apple menu β About This Mac β More Info β Storage) to see apps by size. Drag them to Trash to uninstall.
Most apps ship with 30+ language packs you'll never use. Apps like Monolingual let you safely strip them out, recovering 1β3 GB.
If you're a developer, old simulator runtimes can consume 20β60 GB. Remove them via Xcode β Settings β Platforms.
Open Disk Utility β select your drive β click First Aid. This checks for and repairs filesystem errors. Do this last.
Go to System Settings β General β Storage and turn on Store in iCloud. macOS automatically offloads files you haven't opened recently.
Set a calendar reminder once a month to clear your user caches. 10 minutes of effort can keep your system consistently snappy.
Apple's Storage Manager (About This Mac) has a hidden "Recommendations" tab that flags exactly what's taking space right now.
In System Settings β General β Login Items, disable anything you don't need launching at startup. Fewer agents = faster boot.
If you use Homebrew, run brew cleanup periodically. It removes old formula versions and cached downloads automatically.
Photo libraries accumulate duplicates. Use macOS's built-in Duplicates album in Photos, or apps like Gemini to find and remove them.