Clearing cache on an iPhone requires separate steps for Safari and each app, since iOS has no single system-wide cache button.
One wrong tap clears your browsing history instead of the stored website data you actually wanted gone. The real route to emptying cache on an iPhone is split across two locations: Safari’s advanced settings and each app’s individual storage page. The slow way to free space is buying more iCloud storage — the fast way is walking through the steps below, hitting the data that actually accumulates.
Most guides stop after telling you to clear Safari history and call it done. That leaves the bulk of cached files — app-specific downloads, temporary images, and internal databases — untouched. This article covers the full sequence, from Apple’s official Safari procedure to the Offload trick that forces stubborn apps to drop their cached weight.
Where iPhone Cache Actually Lives
iOS separates cache into two categories: Safari’s browsing data (cookies, history, stored page files) and per-app temporary data (downloaded media, thumbnails, session files). There is no single “Clear Cache” button at the system level, and Apple intentionally prevents apps from accessing one universal storage pool.[10]
The practical result is that you have to clear Safari’s data through Settings, then handle each app individually. The table below shows where each type of cached data lives and which method clears it.
| Cache Type | Location to Clear | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Safari history & cookies | Settings → Apps → Safari → Clear History and Website Data | Signs you out of websites, removes browsing history, deletes cookies |
| Safari stored website data | Settings → Apps → Safari → Advanced → Website Data → Remove All | Clears cached page files and offline data without signing you out of sites |
| App cache (Chrome, TikTok, WhatsApp, etc.) | Inside the app’s own Settings → Clear Cache or Reset | Only works for apps that offer the option; varies by app |
| App temporary files (no built-in cache button) | Settings → General → iPhone Storage → [App] → Offload App | Removes the app but keeps documents and data; reinstalling restores the app with a clean cache |
| App full data reset | Settings → General → iPhone Storage → [App] → Delete App | Removes the app and all its local data; reinstall from the App Store |
| Keyboard cache | Settings → General → Transfer or Reset iPhone → Reset → Reset Keyboard Dictionary | Clears learned words; rarely frees meaningful space |
| System cache (non-user-facing) | No user-facing option — only restored via full backup or iOS update | Not accessible without a full device wipe |
Clear Safari Cache the Official Way
The primary Apple-documented method clears browsing history, cookies, and cached page files in one operation. Open Settings → Apps → Safari → Clear History and Website Data. Choose a timeframe — All History for a full clear — then tap Clear History.[10][9]
This signs you out of any websites you were logged into and deletes your browsing history back to the selected timeframe. It also strips the stored page files that Safari uses to load sites faster, which is the part that actually frees space.
If you only want to clear the cached page files without losing logins: use the separate Website Data path. Go to Settings → Apps → Safari → Advanced → Website Data → Remove All Website Data → Remove Now.[10] This clears the cached page snapshots and offline storage without touching your history or stored passwords. If the Remove All Website Data button is grayed out, there may be no data to clear, or Screen Time content restrictions could be blocking the option.
Why Clearing Safari Data Alone Is Not Enough
Storing cache on iPhone is handled per-app, not centrally. Safari’s cached data is the easiest to clear at scale, but it represents only a fraction of total temporary storage. Apps like TikTok, Chrome, and WhatsApp maintain their own internal cache that Apple’s system-level menus cannot touch.[1]
The common mistake is assuming that the Safari clear operation wipes all cached files on the phone. It does not. You have to check each high-storage app individually, and the steps differ depending on whether the app offers a built-in cache control.
Apps With Their Own Cache Controls
Some third-party apps expose a direct cache-clearing option in their own settings. Chrome, WhatsApp, and TikTok each provide a Clear Cache or Manage Storage button inside the app’s settings menu.[1][4] The exact location varies: Chrome’s lives under Chrome Settings → Privacy and Security → Clear Browsing Data, while WhatsApp’s is under Settings → Data and Storage → Manage Storage.
For apps that do not provide this option — and most apps do not — the fallback is to use Apple’s storage management tools.
How to Clear App Cache When There Is No Built-In Option
Apple provides two methods in iPhone Storage: Offload App and Delete App. Go to Settings → General → iPhone Storage, tap the app name, and you will see both options.
Offload App removes the app’s executable but keeps its documents and data on the phone. Reinstalling the app from the App Store restores the icon, and the app starts fresh — but any cached files stored inside the app’s sandbox are gone. This is the recommended method when you want to keep the app’s user data (documents, chats, saved game progress) while clearing its cache.[1][3]
Delete App removes the app and all its local data, including documents, settings, and cache. Use this when you want a complete reset or the app has become unusually bloated. You will need to reinstall it and log in again.
| Method | What Gets Removed | What Stays | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clear Safari History & Website Data | History, cookies, cached page files | Bookmarks, passwords, autofill data (if saved in iCloud Keychain) | Routine Safari space recovery |
| Remove All Website Data (Advanced) | Cached page files, offline storage | History, cookies, logins | Clearing Safari cache without losing logins |
| Offload App | App executable and cache | Documents, data, settings | Clearing app cache while keeping user data |
| Delete App | App and all local data | Nothing locally; iCloud data remains | Full app reset or major storage recovery |
| In-app cache button (if available) | App-defined cache | User data, logins | Quick app-specific clearance |
What Not to Do: Common Mistakes That Waste Time
The most expensive error on an iPhone is expecting a single “clear cache” button to handle everything. Because iOS does not provide one, users often repeat the same Safari clear operation expecting different results, then assume the phone is holding onto hidden storage it will never release.
Another common mistake is using Offload App when the real goal is a full wipe — Offload deliberately keeps documents and data, so if you want to reclaim the space those files occupy, choose Delete App instead.[1][3] A third mistake is assuming clearing history in Safari is the same as clearing website data. They affect different stored data categories and produce different outcomes on storage reports.
Final Sequence: What to Do in Order
- Clear Safari cache first. Settings → Apps → Safari → Advanced → Website Data → Remove All Website Data. This clears the most common cache source without logging you out.
- Check high-storage apps. Open Settings → General → iPhone Storage. Sort by size and tap each app near the top. If the app shows a storage breakdown with “Documents & Data” far exceeding the app’s own size, tap it and use Offload App.
The app icon will dim, and the line “App will be reinstalled” appears. Tap Reinstall App to restore it with a clean cache. - Delete and reinstall apps with stubborn cache. If Offload does not free enough space (some apps accumulate multi-gigabyte caches), use Delete App instead, then download it fresh from the App Store.
- Repeat every few months, not weekly. Cache exists to make apps faster — clearing it daily hurts performance and battery life without recovering meaningful storage.
After completing this sequence, the phone should show noticeably more available space on the iPhone Storage screen. No further search needed — the space is yours to keep until the apps rebuild their caches through normal use.
References & Sources
- Apple Support. “Clear the history, cache, and cookies from Safari on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch.” Official procedure for Safari cache and data clearance on iPhone.
- Apple Support Guide. “Clear your cache and cookies on iPhone.” Apple’s guide showing the Settings → Apps → Safari path and timeframe selection.
- Proton. “How to clear cache on an iPhone.” Third-party guide reinforcing Safari and per-app cache clearing methods.
- Rokform. “How to Clear Cache on an iPhone.” Additional walkthrough covering Safari cache and advanced troubleshooting.
