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11 February 2026

You’re about to capture the perfect sunset or record a once-in-a-lifetime concert moment when the “Storage Almost Full” notification hits your screen like a bucket of cold water.
In 2026, our phones are essentially our external brains. Between high-res 4K videos and heavy social media apps, storage fills up faster than ever. In fact, recent studies by Virgin Media O2 show that Millennials are now spending six times more on digital storage than Baby Boomers, amounting to over $1 billion a year globally.
The good news? You don’t need a new phone or a bigger iCloud plan. You just need 20 minutes. So let’s get those gigabytes back.
Before we dive in, here is a reality check – a full phone is a slow phone. Research into smartphone performance shows that when your storage drops below 10–15% of its total capacity, the device enters a survival mode. Since the operating system needs breathing room to move temporary files around, a near-full drive can cause app performance to drop by 100% to 300%. In extreme cases, system lag can increase by over 2000%.
The goal? Free up at least 10 GB in the next 20 minutes.
If you’re a parent, you may think it’s those thousands of photos of your kiddos, but your storage screen may show 8GB of WhatsApp instead because every group chat video has been saved for months. So before you delete anything, check what’s really filling up your phone because guessing, simply wastes time.
On your iPhone:
On Android:
We often treat apps like furniture. Once they’re in the house, we forget they’re there. Here is what you should do:
When to offload: games you don’t play, travel apps you only use occasionally, editors you opened once.
Remember that
Clear cache: removes temporary files (safe and quick)
Clear storage/data: logs you out and resets the app (bigger impact)
Simply go to Settings → Apps → choose the big one → Storage → Clear cache
Also, apps don’t just take storage for the app itself, they store:

Photos and videos are the usual suspects, but don’t just start deleting random memories, you must be strategic.
For starters do the following:
This is the “under the hood” stuff that most people ignore. Like when someone downloads a full season “for travel,” then forgets and months later the phone won’t install an update because it’s still carrying 12 episodes offline.
Check these common culprits:

Now that you’ve cleared the space, let’s make sure it doesn’t fill up again by next Tuesday.
Aim to keep 10–15% free storage so your phone can update apps, take photos and run smoothly.
Enable “Optimise iPhone storage” or the Google Photos “Free up space” tool. This keeps low-resolution versions on your phone while the heavy, high-res originals live safely in the cloud.
Do 20 minutes sound long and you’re in a rush? Then do these five things in order:
If you followed these steps, you likely just reclaimed several gigabytes of space and significantly boosted your phone’s processing speed. And with a little spring cleaning every few months, you can keep your phone fast, lean and ready for that next big moment.
For more useful mobile tips, explore our guides on extending smartphone battery life, keeping your smartphone secure, debunking common 5G myths and how to boost your mobile speed.
1. Why is my phone storage full when I don’t have anything?
Because storage hides in places you don’t notice, like cached social videos, message attachments, offline downloads and app data.
2. Is clearing cache safe?
Yes since doing so removes temporary files. Just keep in mind that the app may load a little slower the first time afterwards.
3. What should I delete first to free up space quickly?
Definitely large videos and offline downloads. They’re easy to remove and give the biggest, fastest space gains.
4. Should I delete apps?
If you’re on iPhone, offload first so you keep your data. On Android, clear cache first, then uninstall apps you truly don’t use.
5. How much space can I free in 20 minutes?
Often several GB, especially if you delete a few long videos, remove offline downloads and clear one bloated app.
Sources:
Millennials spend six times more on mobile phone storage than boomers