How to Clear the Cache in Internet Explorer 11

The cache includes copies of the text, images, videos, and other data from recently viewed websites that are stored on your hard drive. These temporary files remain on the computer until they expire, the cache becomes full, or you remove them manually.

Tips for Clearing the Internet Explorer Cache

Here are a few tips to follow: That window closes, and the mouse icon changes to the wait cursor for a few moments. When the cursor returns to normal or the success message displays at the bottom of the screen, the temporary internet files are deleted.

Older Internet Explorer versions, like IE10, IE9, and IE8, have similar procedures for clearing the cache. Avoid clearing the cache in IE manually by using a program that does it for you. One popular system cleaner is CCleaner. Make sure Temporary Internet Files is chosen under the Internet Explorer area of the Custom Clean > Windows section. If you want to delete other Internet Explorer data like cookies, browsing or download history, form data, or passwords, put a check in the box next to that option while in Step 2. IE’s temporary internet files settings can be changed through Internet Options. Enter the inetcpl.cpl command in the Run dialog box (WIN+R) and then go to General > Settings to find the Website Data Settings window. Go to Internet Options to choose the maximum size of the cache. You can also force IE to check for new website data and avoid the cache every time you visit the page, every time you use IE, automatically (the default option), or never. By default, IE stores temporary internet files in this folder, but you can change the location.

Why IE Stores Temporary Internet Files

The idea behind temporary internet files is that you can access the same content again without loading it from the website. If the content is stored on your computer, the browser can pull up that data instead of downloading it again, which saves bandwidth and page loading times. What ends up happening is that only the new content from the page downloads, while the rest that’s been unchanged is pulled from the hard drive. Besides better performance, temporary internet files are used by some agencies to collect forensic evidence of someone’s browsing activities. If the content remains on the hard drive (that is, if it hasn’t been cleared away), the data can be used as evidence that someone accessed a particular website.