FaceTime Like a Pro
Get our exclusive Ultimate FaceTime Guide 📚 — absolutely FREE when you sign up for our newsletter below.
FaceTime Like a Pro
Get our exclusive Ultimate FaceTime Guide 📚 — absolutely FREE when you sign up for our newsletter below.
Learn how to clear Safari cache, cookies, and history on Mac for faster browsing and better privacy, with step by step methods, shortcuts, and fixes.
Safari on a Mac can feel slow when tabs stack up, a couple of extensions act up, or one site just misbehaves. Half-rendered pages, spinning wheels, the beachball. On my MacBook Air, clearing old browser data is the quick switch that fixes speed and privacy in one go.
Regularly removing Safari cache, history, and cookies pays off right away. Pages open faster, some storage comes back, and those odd layout glitches settle down. Sites stop looping logins, and tracking loses its grip over time. For me, iCloud Keychain fills credentials, so signing back in is easy.
This guide covers every method for managing Safari data on your Mac. Whether you want a full reset or a targeted cache clean, you will find steps that match what you need. No guesswork.
Before you press Clear History in Safari, it helps to know what the browser keeps and why. Quick map, fewer surprises.
This method clears all browsing data in one pass. It is the most thorough approach, and it will sign you out of every website, so know that up front.
This removes your entire browsing history, cached files, cookies, and other website data stored by Safari. Afterward, Safari feels like a fresh install.
This method clears cached website files while preserving your browsing history and saved sign-ins. A quick fix for pages that stall or load strangely without compromising user experience.
On the next visit, some sites may open a bit slower as Safari pulls fresh copies, then performance settles and improves on repeat loads.
If one site keeps acting up, you can wipe only that site’s saved data and leave everything else untouched. Quick, focused, no spillover.
This fixes problems tied to that domain while keeping history, sign-ins, and preferences for your other sites exactly as they were.
Blocking every cookie gives the strongest privacy, since sites cannot save tracking or preference data on the Mac at all.
Important warning: This breaks logins, shopping carts, and many core site features. For most people, keep this off and use Safari’s built-in Prevent cross-site tracking instead, which stops third-party tracking cookies while still allowing the first-party cookies sites need to work.
If the Clear History or Remove buttons look greyed out, Screen Time restrictions are almost always the culprit, especially if Screen Time is syncing across your Apple devices.
The Fix:
Open Safari → Settings → Extensions and audit what is installed. Toggle off or uninstall anything you do not use. Unused extensions can keep local data, inject scripts, and slow page loads in subtle ways, so trimming the list often makes Safari feel snappier.
Clear the cache and old website data about once a month to keep Safari running smoothly. Set a recurring reminder in the Calendar app so the routine actually happens. Simple, repeatable.
Check available storage in Apple Menu → Settings → General → Storage. If space is tight, clear website data more often and remove large downloads you no longer need.
Routine Safari data cleanups keep the balance between convenience and performance. A monthly cache sweep keeps pages quick, and targeted website data removal fixes odd site behavior without upsetting logins, history, or iCloud sync.
Pick the method that fits the moment: a full wipe for privacy, cache only for speed, or single-site cleanup for troubleshooting. Do it right, and Safari on your Mac responds with noticeably faster loads and smoother scrolling.
FAQs
Turn on the Develop menu in Safari Settings → Advanced, then choose Develop → Empty Caches or press Option + Command + E on your Mac.
Clearing history removes your browsing record but leaves you signed in. Clearing website data deletes cookies, cache, and local storage, which signs you out of sites.
Screen Time is blocking the action. Open System Settings → Screen Time → Content & Privacy, then set Web Content to Unrestricted Access.
Open Safari → Settings… → Advanced, and enable “Show Develop menu in menu bar.”
No. Passwords stored in iCloud Keychain stay intact when you clear Safari data.
Bookmarks are not affected by clearing cache, history, or website data.
Quit and relaunch Safari, check for macOS and Safari updates, and disable or remove extensions that may be hurting performance completely.
Read more: