Debunked Fact Technology

Clearing Cookies Makes Your Computer Faster

Cookies are tiny text files; clearing them frees negligible storage and doesn't affect performance

Regularly deleting cookies will speed up your computer and improve internet browsing performance.

Cookies are small text files (typically 1–4 KB each) storing login sessions and site preferences; a browser might accumulate hundreds to low thousands, totaling perhaps 10–50 MB, negligible on modern hard drives measuring hundreds of gigabytes. Clearing cookies does not noticeably free disk space or improve performance; the performance myth conflates browsers with full system optimization. Excessive cookie accumulation does marginally increase cookie-lookup time during page loads (milliseconds), yet deleting all cookies increases load time initially as sites must resend new cookies and JavaScript must execute full initialization. Browser manufacturers (Google, Mozilla, Apple) studied cookie management and found automatic periodic deletion preferable to user intervention. The myth persists as part of a general 'digital hygiene' package, clearing browser cache has real benefits (freeing actual gigabytes, stopping stale content from loading), and it gets bundled with cookie deletion despite their different impacts.

Believed 2000–2018
Year Revised 2015
Why Changed Oversimplification
Confidence Fully Debunked
Region Worldwide

Reception

6/10
5/10

Sources

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