Android tip: Five Ways to Free Up Space on Your Android Device

Free Up Space on your Android Device


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Android phones and tablets can quickly tuck you download applications, add media files such as music and movies, and cache data for offline use. Many low-end devices may include a few gigabytes of storage, making it even more of a problem.
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The less space you have, the more you have to spend micromanaging internal storage. If you find yourself in a state-of-space and need to manage it, consider getting a phone or tablet with more storage next time.

Use Android’s Built-in Storage Tool

The recent versions of Android have a storage component that will show you exactly what storage space on your device. To find it, open the Settings screen, press Storage. You can see how much space is used by applications and their data, images, videos, audio files, downloads, cached data, and other miscellaneous files.
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Tap an option to see exactly what is using space and delete it. For example, you can select applications to display the list of applications using the most space and delete. Select Downloads to view your download list where you can delete the files and press the cached data to delete the data of all installed applications. Use the other options to view files that take up space and delete those you do not want.


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When processing applications, keep in mind that the application itself, its data and its cache all add to the total space used by the application. For example, if you have Spotify installed and you have cached a lot of online music, Spotify may be using more than 1GB of space. You can clear the cache Spotify to forcibly remove all, or launch the Spotify app and tell it to cache less data for offline listening. Any application that caches data for offline use work like that. In the screenshot below, Google Play Music is only 40.66 MB in size on its own, but it is the storage of 2.24 GB of music in cache.


You can see how much space application uses for data files and delete the cached data for an individual application by selecting it from the Applications list, accessible by pressing the applications on the storage component or tapping applications on the Settings main screen.


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See Which Folders and Files Are Taking Up the Most Space

Android’s built-in tool is helpful for visualizing the space used by different types of data, but not the exact amount of space used by individual folders and files. For this, you’ll need a third-party app like the excellent and free DiskUsage. Install it from Google Play, launch it, and you can scan your device’s file system.


Use the visualization to see which folders and files are taking up the most space. You can delete them right from within the Disk Usage app to free up space. For example, you might see a leftover folder from a game or app you’ve uninstalled. That app should have removed that data, but you can do it by hand with this app. Select a folder or file, tap the menu button, and tap Delete to remove it.

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Bear in mind that you could delete files that apps depend on here. Don’t delete data belonging to an app unless you’re willing to lose that data. In many cases, the data should be synced online in some way and you should just be able to re-download the data if you need it.

Add an SD Card and Move Data There


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Many Android devices still ship with microSD card slots, although they are becoming less and less common on newer devices. If your phone or tablet does have a microSD card slot, you can purchase a microSD card and insert it into your device to gain more storage. The storage you gain can hold music, videos, pictures, and other media files–and, in some cases, even apps (see the next section). Some apps may allow you to move their cache locations to the SD card, too.
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If your device already has an SD card, this is a good option if you want more storage. MicroSD cards are fairly cheap, so you can upgrade and get a lot more storage for a fairly low price.
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After installing the SD card, format it as portable or internal storage (if your phone has Android 6.0 Marshmallow), then connect your device to your computer and move your music, media, and other files to the SD card’s free space.

Move Apps to the SD Card


Depending on your phone and version of Android, you can also move apps to the SD card to free up space.

Android Marshmallow users can do this by formatting the SD card as internal storage. Then, the SD card will be seen as local storage on that device. The system will determine which apps make the most sense to move to the SD card, then go ahead and move them over. You can’t discern between true internal storage and an SD card formatted for internal use, so there’s now way to manually move individual apps over. (You also won’t be able to move the SD card between devices anymore, unless you erase and re-format it.)

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If you are running a pre-Marshmallow version of Android, you can move some apps using Android’s built-in features, or move any app by rooting your phone and partitioning your SD card. You can find instructions for both of those methods in this guide.

Move Photos to the Cloud


Photos can take up a lot of space on a modern smartphone. Rather than storing them all on your phone, you could use an app that automatically uploads photos you take to an online account like Google Photos, Dropbox, Microsoft OneDrive, Flickr, or something else. Google Photos is integrated into the “Photos” app on your Android device and offers unlimited storage of photos. You can access them from within the Photos app or at photos.google.com on any computer.
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However you do this, you can then use the Photos app on your device to remove the copies of photos stored on your device itself, potentially freeing up gigabytes of space. You could also just copy those photos to your computer and back them up the old-fashioned way, too. The best part about using this method is that you can still access all of your photos through the Photos app, regardless of whether they’re stored locally or in the cloud. It’s seamless (and brilliant).
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If you don’t like Google Photos, you can also do this with other apps, like Dropbox.

The same trip could work with other files taking up a lot of space on your phone—for example, you could upload a large music collection to a service like Google Play Music and stream it back to your device over an Internet connection, caching the files you need instead of storing your entire collection on the smartphone. 

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