Article · SuperCleanerPro
Mac "Other" Storage Is Full — Here's What It Actually Is and How to Clear It
Open About This Mac → Storage and there it is: a huge gray bar called Other (or "System Data" on newer macOS), often 50 GB or more. Apple never explains what is inside it. Here is what it actually contains — and what is safe to delete.
What counts as "Other"?
Anything that isn't a photo, video, audio file or app binary lands in Other:
- App caches — browsers, chat apps and design tools cache aggressively
- Old installers —
.dmgand.pkgfiles forgotten in Downloads - Developer junk — Xcode DerivedData, iOS device support files, old simulators
- App leftovers — support files from apps you deleted long ago
- Logs and diagnostics — crash reports and system logs
- Time Machine local snapshots — kept when your backup disk is unplugged
Safe to delete right now
~/Library/Caches— apps rebuild caches automatically. Sort by size, delete the biggest offenders.~/Downloads— search for.dmgand.pkg; installers are useless after installation.~/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData— safe for developers to clear entirely; Xcode rebuilds it.- Leftovers of deleted apps in
~/Library/Application Support— folders named after apps you no longer have.
Never delete inside
/Systemor/Library/Extensions— those belong to macOS itself.
The one-click way
SuperCleanerPro's Smart Scan finds all of the above in a single pass — caches, installer packages, Xcode junk and orphaned app files — shows exactly how much each category holds, and lets you review before cleaning. Most Macs reclaim 10–40 GB on the first run.