Use your text editor of choice or if you don't have one use Windows Notepad
Opening with Notepad may or may not result in a fancy mess
- Close Spotify
- Open File Explorer and paste the following into the address bar
%appdata%/Spotify
¤ - Open the file named prefs with your text editor
- Change the numeric value following storage.size= . If storage.size= doesn't exist add it manually to the end of the file and assign numeric value. This value represents megabytes. One gigabyte equals 1024 megabytes. In the end, it should look something like this
storage.size=1024
- Save the file
- Start Spotify
- The cache should be reduced; not exceeding the size that you entered
- To verify, check the size of the Data folder in the following directory
%localappdata%/Spotify
¤ For the App-Version of Spotify on Windows 10 use %localappdata%\Packages\SpotifyAB.SpotifyMusic_xxxxxxxxxxxxx\LocalState\Spotify
instead of %appdata%/Spotify
, credit to @SawPsyder
Apple TextEdit.app works fine to open "prefs" or one can use some similar code editing program
- Close Spotify
- Open Finder and press ⇧ + ⌘ + G or Open Spotlight (⌘ + Spacebar) and paste the following into the address bar
~/Library/Application Support/Spotify
- Open the file named prefs with your text editor
- Change the numeric value following storage.size= . If storage.size= doesn't exist add it manually to the end of the file and assign numeric value. This value represents megabytes. One gigabyte equals 1024 megabytes. In the end, it should look something like this
storage.size=1024
- Save the file (⌘ + S)
- Start Spotify
- The cache should be reduced; not exceeding the size that you entered.
- To verify, check the size of the Data folder in the following directory
~/Library/Caches/com.spotify.client/
On Windows, make sure to make both prefs files - one in the Spotify folder (in
%appdata%
) and the other inside the Users folder - read-only. Spotify likes to overwrite these.Something else I noticed is that Spotify only appears to clear its cache on startup, so if you leave it open it won't stop at the desired size. Never mind, it does seem Spotify is managing cache properly, even if it takes a while to clean up.It's a shame we can't disable caching, Spotify is straight-up storing entire songs once they're played. God save our SSDs.