How to Clear Cache on Chrome, Firefox & Edge — Complete 2026 Guide

Is your browser loading pages slowly, showing outdated content, or refusing to display certain websites correctly? The solution is often as simple as clearing your browser cache. In this guide, we'll show you exactly how to clear cache, cookies, and browsing data on the three most popular browsers: Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, and Microsoft Edge.

Whether you're troubleshooting a website issue or just want to free up space, this step-by-step guide has you covered. We'll also show you keyboard shortcuts for instant cache clearing and how to set up automatic cache cleanup.

What Is Browser Cache?

Your browser cache is like a temporary storage room. When you visit a website, your browser saves copies of images, scripts, stylesheets, and other files locally on your computer. The next time you visit that same website, your browser loads these saved files instead of downloading them again, which makes the page load faster.

While caching improves performance, over time the cache can become outdated, corrupted, or simply too large. When this happens, you may experience:

  • Websites displaying old or incorrect content
  • Pages loading slowly or not at all
  • Login issues or form submission errors
  • Browser using too much disk space
  • Videos or images not loading properly

Why Should You Clear Your Cache?

Clearing your cache regularly provides several benefits:

  • Fix website display issues: See the latest version of websites instead of cached (possibly broken) versions
  • Free up disk space: Browser cache can consume hundreds of megabytes or even gigabytes over time
  • Improve browser speed: A bloated cache can actually slow down your browser
  • Enhance privacy: Remove traces of your browsing history from your device
  • Resolve login problems: Fix issues with websites not recognizing your credentials

How to Clear Cache in Google Chrome

Google Chrome is the most popular browser, used by over 65% of internet users. Here's how to clear its cache:

Method 1: Using Settings

1

Open Chrome Settings

Click the three-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner and select "Settings." Alternatively, type chrome://settings in the address bar.

2

Navigate to Privacy

Click "Privacy and security" in the left sidebar, then click "Delete browsing data."

3

Select Data to Delete

In the "Basic" tab, set the time range to "All time." Check "Cached images and files" and optionally "Cookies and other site data." Click "Delete data."

Method 2: Keyboard Shortcut (Fastest)

Press Ctrl + Shift + Delete (Windows) or Cmd + Shift + Delete (Mac) to instantly open the "Delete browsing data" dialog. This is the fastest way to clear your cache.

💡 Pro Tip

To hard-refresh a single page without clearing the entire cache, press Ctrl + Shift + R (or Ctrl + F5). This reloads the page while ignoring the cache, perfect for web developers or checking recent changes.

How to Clear Cache in Mozilla Firefox

Firefox offers excellent privacy controls and makes it easy to clear your cache.

1

Open Firefox Settings

Click the hamburger menu (☰) in the top-right corner and select "Settings." Or type about:preferences in the address bar.

2

Go to Privacy & Security

Click "Privacy & Security" in the left sidebar. Scroll down to the "Cookies and Site Data" section.

3

Clear Data

Click "Clear Data." Check "Cached Web Content" (and optionally "Cookies and Site Data"). Click "Clear." For historical data, scroll down to "History" and click "Clear History."

How to clear cache on Chrome Firefox and Edge browsers

How to Clear Cache in Microsoft Edge

Microsoft Edge is built on the same Chromium engine as Chrome, so the process is similar.

1

Open Edge Settings

Click the three-dot menu (⋯) in the top-right corner and select "Settings." Or type edge://settings in the address bar.

2

Clear Browsing Data

Click "Privacy, search, and services." Under "Clear browsing data," click "Choose what to clear." Set time range to "All time," check "Cached images and files," and click "Clear now."

Quick Keyboard Shortcuts Summary

Here's a quick reference table for clearing cache with keyboard shortcuts:

Browser Windows Mac
Chrome Ctrl + Shift + Del Cmd + Shift + Del
Firefox Ctrl + Shift + Del Cmd + Shift + Del
Edge Ctrl + Shift + Del Cmd + Shift + Del

Set Up Automatic Cache Clearing

You can configure your browser to automatically clear the cache when you close it:

Chrome

Go to Settings → Privacy and security → Site settings → Cookies and site data and enable "Clear cookies and site data when you close all windows."

Firefox

Go to Settings → Privacy & Security. Under "History," set Firefox to "Use custom settings for history" and check "Clear history when Firefox closes."

Edge

Go to Settings → Privacy, search, and services → Clear browsing data. Click "Choose what to clear every time you close the browser" and enable the categories you want auto-cleared.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will clearing cache delete my saved passwords?

No, unless you specifically check the "Passwords" option when clearing data. By default, most browsers only clear cached images and files. Your saved passwords, bookmarks, and browser settings will remain untouched.

How often should I clear my cache?

For most users, clearing cache once a month is sufficient. If you browse heavily, visit many different websites, or do web development, clearing it weekly is recommended.

Will clearing cache make my browser slower initially?

Yes, briefly. The first time you visit a website after clearing the cache, it may take a bit longer to load because the browser needs to download all assets fresh. But after that initial visit, the cache rebuilds and everything runs smoothly again.

What's the difference between cache and cookies?

Cache stores website files (images, scripts) to speed up load times. Cookies store data about your session (login status, preferences, tracking info). You can clear them independently — clearing cache alone usually fixes most display issues without logging you out of websites.

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James Wilson

James is a certified hardware technician with a passion for helping people fix their devices. He has helped thousands of users solve their tech problems over his 10-year career.