

Some of these utilities include OmniDiskSweeper, DiskInventoryX, CleanMyMac X, and MacClearner Pro. There are various free and paid disk analyzer utilities for macOS that allow you to analyze your storage to find out the files that make up the Other category. Finding Other Files using a Third-Party Tool # However, you can find a major chunk of this category under two folders: Caches and Application Support. Most of these folders contribute to the Other storage category. Here you will find a list of various folders. Here is a quick way to navigate to this folder:įinder will now open to the Library folder. Finding Other Files Manually #Ī majority of the files that take up the Other storage belong to your Mac’s Library folder. How to Find Files in the Other category on Mac? #įiles in the Other category are typically found in two ways: by looking into different folders that make up the Other category, or by using a third-party disk analyzer or cleanup utility. However, this approach of viewing storage breakdown is only partially useful since you only get to see the total space occupied by the Other category and don’t really have an option to see the exact breakdown of files that take up this space. You can find these files by going into System Information.

What exactly are these file types, you ask? Well, any types of files on your Mac that belong to one of the obscure categories like the user and system caches, disk images and archives, app extensions and plugins, and system and temporary files fall under the Other storage. It represents all those files that do not fall under the standard storage category labels (Apps, Documents, iCloud Drive, etc.) but still consume a noticeable chunk of space on your system. Other is a category label in macOS’ System Information tool.

If you are running low on storage space and seeing the Other category holding up a significant chunk of your storage space, here is a guide to help you identify what constitutes the Other storage category, how to find the Other files, and how to clean them off your Mac.
