MacOS Sequoia filling up with system data

I have a 2023 Mac Studio M2 with 1 TB SSD and a week ago there was 600GB of free space. I updated Adobe CC yesterday and when I reopened After Effects I got the message that I didn't have enough disk space for the cache. I checked and there was only 90GB free space. I then restarted the machine, deleted the Adobe cache (6gb), deleted my Time Machine snapshots, deleted all the other caches. I ended up with 258GB of free space. A check of the storage list shows that I still have 492GB of system data and I can't get rid of it.


Any suggestions?


Mac Studio, macOS 15.0

Posted on Oct 17, 2024 12:49 PM

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Posted on Jan 4, 2025 4:43 AM

I had the humongous System Data issue about a week ago (90MB of free space?!) and solved by 2 actions:

First deleting the offending cache* at ~/Library/Containers/com.apple.mediaanalysisd/Data/Library/Caches.

Next I upgraded to Sequoia 15.2, where apparently this cache over-filling is solved.

No problems now.

*in ~/Library/Containers/com.apple.mediaanalysisd one of the directories was humongous and filled 99.9% of free space. Go and check that directory in your ~/Library and by size it's immediately clear. Delete the oversize directory, and upgrade to MacOS 15.2 directly after that.

I could not upgrade to 15.2 prior to clearing this cache because, no free space...

I noticed this issue some weeks after upgrading to Sequoia, it probably appeared in Sequoia 15.1.

(the system had been creating a new mediaanalysisd cache file of 64MB probably every hour or so, without ever deleting the older ones. I saw an endless list of these 64MB files... On its own that sounds a small file, but in the end filled some hundreds of GB in that cache)

72 replies

Oct 17, 2024 3:04 PM in response to AlWeir

Thank you, but no. I want to keep the Desktop and Documents data that is synched to my MacBook Pro and is necessary for my business. I want to get rid of the 490GB of SYSTEM DATA that wasn't there last week. Forget about the small stuff. I was happy when 400Gb was used, and 600GB was free. And I'd rather not have to wipe the SSD and reinstall every 12 months. I had enough of that when forced to work in a Microsoft windows environment! And before you ask, my first Mac was a Quadra 700 in 1992.

Oct 22, 2024 3:44 PM in response to DGaryC

First of all, thank you SO much for the extremely quick response!

I'd say about 10 minutes after I posted my previous message - and while I was using Disk Inventory X to scan for any hidden huge folders - my Mac suddenly decided it felt 200gb lighter..


I'm not sure if the actual folder scanning did anything or it just randomly felt like unclogging the drain, but I'm not sitting comfortably at 'only' 200gb system data...

Nov 27, 2024 7:03 AM in response to DGaryC

Exact same story here with Mac M1 Pro - Sequoia update exploded the system data and deleting items from documents seems to only shift data from there to system. I trashed 260GB of video from documents and saw a corresponding increase in system data. I don't use time machine. Other fixes suggested don't do anything. Lack of free space seems to be causing other buggy issues with performance and random rebooting. Would love an actual update to fix this, or easier way to downgrade to macOS 14.

Dec 9, 2024 6:41 PM in response to DGaryC

I'm having the same issue. Most of my data is stored on hard drives so my macbookpro doesn't really store much but applications. Since upgrading to Sequoia the system data takes up 250GB which makes me wonder if this is a way for apple to force users to purchase iCloud space. Can't seem to wonder why it's taking up so much space.

Dec 30, 2024 5:08 PM in response to DGaryC

Here's an interesting update to my original post. Since bringing my system data down to a manageable level (<100gb), I've had a steady 600gb free on my 1tb drive for a month now.

But I've recently been downloading all of my Vimeo video files to archive locally. I'll download around 100gb worth, then copy them to an external SSD and delete the files in my Downloads. I've downloaded a total of 250gb so far, and deleted the files from my MacOS drive, but suddenly my System Data has blown out by... 250gb!

It appears that deleting the files from my MacOS HD doesn't actually delete them.

I suspect Time Machine has something to do with this. But I've deleted my TM snapshots and if anything, my System Data has grown.

Feb 4, 2025 7:53 AM in response to DGaryC

I'm not as technologically sophisticated as anyone in this thread. But to my simple mind, it seems counter-intuitive that I should have to delete photos, videos and other documents I keep on my hard drive just to allow the system data to take up 75% of the total volume. I mean: isn't that the purpose of my hard drive, to store stuff I want?


I'm not sure when the system data started to balloon like this, but my machine is really struggling under its weight (1.5 TB out of 2 TB total storage).


(Mac Mini 2018, Quad-Core Intel Core i3; Sequoia 15.3)



Feb 19, 2025 5:16 PM in response to DGaryC

My phone started having trouble a week ago - opening apps caused my phone to restart, apps wouldn't open (including my Tesla app which I needed to get back into my car), camera, phone, face ID, etc. Super unstable after the 18.3.1 update. I erased my phone and restored from backup twice after cleaning all large files off and the system data grew. It kept using all my storage and I couldn't clean it up. After working on it for days, I decided to erase, but not to bring anything over (no backup or anything) and still my system data was full. I did a DFU (device firmware upgrade) and while it took all day, it fixed the problem. I had to look the instructions up online and I restored a backup from a few days ago. Storage is freed up finally! I did open a support ticket and Apple is aware of the issue and working to resolve. That's the only info I could get. Best of luck.

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MacOS Sequoia filling up with system data

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