How do I free up space for system files on an iMac with limited internal storage?

The other day, I was trying to install an update on my 2021 M1 iMac. The update was 19G, and I only had 4.5G of available space on my internal 256G drive.I was able to free up space by deleting all of the apps that ‘storage’ said were incompatible. After updating, I am back to only having 4.5G of space available on the internal drive. I use an 8TB external drive for file storage, but unfortunately, I can’t put system files there. Storage says that System Data is taking up 122G of my drive. It doesn’t give me any options on what to do with that. Deleting Apple Intelligence frees up 10G of space, so getting rid of that could be an option. I also have a 10G backup of my iPhone, but no option is available except to delete it. I’ve been using Macs for nearly 20 years, and have been migrating to a new Mac every few years using Time Machine backups. Are these space limitations normal? Is it possible to move my phone backup and apps to the external drive?



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iMac (M1, 2021)

Posted on May 1, 2025 5:12 PM

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May 7, 2025 1:50 PM in response to AntonyFromWatertown

You appear to have current backups of all of your stuff, so i would suggest this:

Go to Time Machine settings and disable automatic backups. This will prevent TM from creating local snapshots that may be taking up space on your drive when the TM b/u drive is not available. About Time Machine local snapshots - Apple Support


If there are any snapshots taking up space on the drive, you can list them in the Terminal app using this command: tmutil listlocalsnapshots /


You may also see them listed in Disk Utility.

• In the DU menu bar, select View > Show All Devices.

• Select your "... - Data" volume in the sidebar, then from the menu bar select View > Show APFS Snapshots. It may take DU a minute (several?) to populate the list and make it actionable. When DU settles, you can select individual snapshots and click the delete button ( – ) below them to delete them. It may take some time for the OS to make the space available, even up to 24 hours. It's an SSD management thing.

Additional guidance: Deleting Time Machine local snapshots - Apple Community


Turning off automatic TM backups is not ideal, and neither is deleting snapshots. But your situation with this low capacity startup drive is already less than ideal.


Until you are ready to wipe the drive, reinstall the OS and not migrate your old files from b/u, this might get you moving forward.


May 10, 2025 5:07 PM in response to AntonyFromWatertown

So, this morning I only had 800M free on my internal drive. Mail kept asking me to quit it because it didn’t have enough space to save new emails. I decided to bite the bullet and re-install. I booted into recovery mode, use Disk Utility to erase my drive, installed Sonoma from Recovery, then upgraded to Sequoia. I was advised to not restore from a Time Machine Backup, but I decided to try anyway. My user profile transferred over without a hitch. For some reason, my apps didn’t transfer over. Migration assistant said that my apps directory was empty. So, I’m re-installing my apps as I need them. Currently, I have 166G of free space on my internal drive, and my System Data is only 22G.

May 3, 2025 2:09 PM in response to AntonyFromWatertown

The System Data can't be manually managed. What you can do is get an external drive formatted APFS for SSDs or OS X Extended (journaled) for HDDs and move your Photos and Music libraries to it as well as little used files in the Documents folder. It's wise to try to maintain a minimum of 80 - 100 GB of free space on the boot drive for optimum system and application performance.


If budget is a concern this setup is the most economical for getting an external SSD:



A 1TB is an excellent option (IMO). I have several. The 1.0TB Mercury Electra 3G 2.5-inch 7mm SATA 3.0Gb/s Solid-State Drive is currently on sale for $75.


If you don't free up additional space you could get to the point where you'd not be able to boot up and run at all.


May 3, 2025 8:20 PM in response to AntonyFromWatertown

On a side note, of late, Time Machine has been telling me that it can’t perform backups. Normally, a reboot fixes this, but today it hasn’t. I’m not the first owner of this computer. I bought it off of my neighbor, who got it as a return from Best Buy. I’m wondering if ‘nuke and pave’ might be an option. Reformat the hard drive, and reinstall from a Time Machine backup. My neighbor’s 2024 iMac is only using 65G of his drive for System Data, and he was upgrading from a Time Machine backup from 2008 iMac running Lion.. My Time Machine backups go all the way back to a G4 Sawtooth tower that was vintage 2000. I had ‘classic’ apps from decades ago, that obviously aren’t viable anymore.


May 10, 2025 6:37 PM in response to AntonyFromWatertown

Here's another possibility that you could consider.


  • Purchase an external SSD such as a Crucial X9 Pro for Mac (1 TB, 2TB, or 4 TB) or one of the SSDs that Other World Computing sells. (The OWC site seems to be down at the moment, but I remember that they have USB, Thunderbolt, and USB4 40 Gbps drives.)
  • Make sure that it is formatted as APFS.
  • Install macOS on it. Then make it your startup disk, start up from it, and run Migration Assistant. Tell Migration Assistant to transfer your information "From a Mac, Time Machine backup or Startup disk" and point Migration Assistant at the internal SSD as the startup disk from which you wish to migrate. (Here, I am guessing that you can use Migration Assistant to copy your data to the new SSD. I haven't actually tried it.)
  • Run off the external SSD. (But don't erase macOS from the internal SSD – you want to be able to boot from the internal drive if anything ever happens to the external one.)


Install macOS on an external storage device and use it as a startup disk - Apple Support

Transfer to a new Mac with Migration Assistant - Apple Support


Notes


  • An alternative to a clean installation of macOS + a migration might be to use Carbon Copy Cloner or SuperDuper! to make a bootable clone backup of the internal SSD on the external SSD.
  • A USB-C (USB 3.1 Gen 2) / NVMe SSD won't be as fast as your iMac's internal SSD, but likely will be fast enough, at a significantly lower cost than an external SSD in a Thunderbolt enclosure or a USB4 40 Gbps enclosure.
  • If you get one of the Crucial drives, be sure to get a "for Mac" version. I read somewhere that the "PC" versions may not work as Mac startup drives "out of the box", and that applying the firmware update to make them work might require the use of a Windows PC.

May 1, 2025 5:43 PM in response to AntonyFromWatertown

You bought a Mac with entry level storage capacity and are now discovering that 256 GB is extremely limiting. I never advise buy less than 512 GB, and would never buy less than 1 TB myself.


Yes, these space limitations are normal, especially with a low capacity startup drive.

Yes, it is possible to move your iPone backups and third-party (non-Apple) apps to the external drive.


Here are some things you can do:

• Empty the Trash in the Dock. 

• Empty the trash in the Photos app.

• Delete unused and unneeded application installers from your downloads folder and desktop.

• Reboot your Mac at least weekly.

• Transfer files that you don’t use daily to an external drive and then delete them from the startup drive and empty the trash. Files that take up the most room are movies, images and music.


This is some of Apple's guidance on the subject of freeing up space:

Free up storage space on Mac - Apple Support

May 8, 2025 9:05 AM in response to AntonyFromWatertown

First, there is no reason to ever install or run any 3rd party "cleaning", "optimizing", "speed-up", anti-virus, VPN or security apps on your Mac.  This documents describe what you need to know and do in order to protect your Mac: Effective defenses against malware and other threats - Apple Community and Recognize and avoid phishing messages, phony support calls, and other scams - Apple Support.  


There are no known viruses, i.e. self propagating, for Macs.  There are, however, adware and malware which require the user to install although unwittingly most of the time thru sneaky links, etc.   


Anti Virus developers try to group all types as viruses into their ad campaigns of fear.  They do a poor job of the detecting and isolating the adware and malware.  Since there are no viruses these apps use up a lot of system resources searching for what is non-existent and adversely affect system and app performance.


There is one app, Malwarebytes, which was developed by a long time contributor to these forums and a highly respected member of the computer security community, that is designed solely to seek out adware and known malware and remove it.  The free version is more than adequate for most users.  


Unless you're using a true VPN tunnel, such as between you and your employer's, school's or bank's servers, they provide false security from a privacy standpoint.  Read these two articles: Public VPN's are anything but private and Security Risks: The Dangers of Using Free VPNs (eccu.edu).  


I recommend you uninstall Clamx A/V software according to the developer's instructions.


All the A/V software does is take up system resources, give false positives and lower bank accounts.


You should be able to recover individual files from Time Machine. You may have to hold down the Option key when accessing TM and select "Browse Other Backup Disks…" from the TM menu.




May 3, 2025 5:08 PM in response to Old Toad

I’ve done all of that already. The only thing that I have on my internal drive is system and application data. I’ve deleted all of my iPhone backups, moved all of my Messenger attachments and the contents of my downloads directory, and cleaned up my Applications. Currently, after my latest reboot, I still only have 4.5G available on my internal drive. The amount of available space keeps shrinking. It was 9.5G yesterday. My next steps will be to start migrating my apps to my external drive, and moving my archived emails.

May 4, 2025 4:33 AM in response to AntonyFromWatertown

A new problem that I’m having (or maybe another symptom of the current one). This morning, Mail was displaying a message saying: "Mail cannot save information about your mailboxes because there isn’t enough space in your home folder.”. In the past, I’ve been able to correct this by rebooting. At times, when my computer is in this state, I have been unable to save anything to any drive, internal or external. I have lost changes to documents when this happens. I think the error message references permissions, I’m not sure. Currently, (before rebooting), my internal drive has 190M of space available. The incredible shrinking hard drive. Also this morning, Time Machine is saying: “Backup Not Completed. Time Machine couldn’t back up to “Time Machine”.”. I see that message almost on a daily message. It is usually corrected by rebooting. Yesterday, it wasn’t. I rebooted at 1930 yesterday evening. The most recent Time Machine backup was at 1430 yesterday. Also, on occasion, my external drive loses connectivity. I have to physically yank the power cord out of the drive and plug it back in, in order to get it to talk. I don’t know if it is related. Disk Utility says that my external drive is healthy. Rebooting. I will provide an update if anything major happens.

May 4, 2025 7:24 AM in response to AntonyFromWatertown

After rebooting, I decided to try and clean up my neighbor’s home directory. I copied and deleted all of his documents and emails, then tried to use Storage to clean up his applications. After logging back into the system as myself, I found out that I had deleted all of my applications. That meant that I lost all of my bookmarks, passwords, etc. because I didn’t back them up. I’m trying to restore from a Time Machine backup, but I’m being told that there isn’t enough space to do that.

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How do I free up space for system files on an iMac with limited internal storage?

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