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Plan
Premium
Country
Australia
Device
Windows desktop computer
12-generation Intel 12400F
Samsung NVME SSD
Operating System
Windows 11 23H2
App version
Spotify for Windows (64 bit)
1.2.65.255.g85e641b4
My Question or Issue
After 8 hours of use, Spotify has written over 30GB of data to my SSD (according to Sysinternals Process Monitor, which is considered an accurate system monitoring tool and can be downloaded from Microsoft's website).
However, my cache file is only 4502MB, or just over 4.5GB in size.
I only listen to music and don't watch music videos.
Whenever I search for new music or browse playlists - and to a lesser extent, while playing music - I've noticed that Process Monitor records Spotify writing several megabytes of data per second. Leaving Spotify running the background playing either one of my playlists or a playlist by another user results in gigabytes of data being written to the SSD.
I'd like an explanation from the Spotify technical team as to why I/O write bytes are so high. Happy to provide technical logs from Sysinternals Process Monitor.
Despite playing my music at Spotify's highest quality setting, we know that their tracks on the desktop app are available to play in the Ogg format at 320kbps
This issue has been reported as far back as 2016
My app settings
Streaming and download quality: Very high
Auto adjust audio quality: deactivated
Normalise volume: Activated and set to Normal volume level
Show local files: deactivated
Publish new playlists on my profile: activated
Start a private session: deactivated
Share my listening activity on Spotify: activated
Show my recently played artists on my public profile: activated
Show my follower and following lists on my public profile: activated
Crossfade songs: activated and set to 10 seconds
Automix: activated
Mono audio: deactivated
Equaliser: set to flat preset
Open Spotify automatically after you log in to the computer: deactivated
Cache location: default
Proxy type: autodetect settings
Enable hardware acceleration: activated
Did you ever manage to fix the issue? I currently am having a similar problem.
Hey folks,
Thank you for your messages and sorry for the delayed response, it seems this one slid in a crack.
We appreciate all the information you've included in your posts. As other streaming apps, the Spotify desktop app may write temp files, log files, metadata (such as the album art) and others that may result in some disk usage, but it should be a small amount of data.
So to make sure we covered all the basics, check if your Spotify app is up to date as updates often include performance and efficiency improvements. We do also recommend clearing the app’s cache and logs to see if disk activity decreases. If the issue persists, if you installed the app from the official website, we'd recommend installing the version available in the Microsoft store (or vice versa) to see if it has the same behavior.
Lastly @synzera, include in your next response the OS version of your device, along with the Spotify version you're currently running to continue investigating the case.
We'll be on the lookout.
Hi Oscar,
Just wanted to update you on the troubleshooting I’ve done so far.
System details:
OS: Windows 11 Pro, Version 24H2 (Build 26100.6584)
Spotify version: 1.2.73.474.g7b30bb2b (Microsoft Store version)
What I’ve already tried:
Cleared cache and logs, reinstalled Spotify multiple times (both website and Store versions).
Fully reset Windows (deleted all files, clean reinstall).
Booted in Safe Mode with Networking — same issue.
Disabled IPv6 (switched to IPv4).
Updated, reinstalled, and verified all audio drivers.
Rebuilt WMI Repository via CMD
Disabled all MSI Center, Killer, and Nahimic services.
Tested with a separate Spotify test account — same result.
Verified that other apps and the Spotify Web Player work fine.
The issue persists: Spotify’s I/O write bytes climb rapidly until the app stops responding. It doesn’t seem to be related to drivers or services since it reproduces even in Safe Mode.
Thanks for your time,
Mishal Noman
Appreciate the details @synzera!
We've forwarded this backstage so it can be looked into, but unfortunately we can't give you an ETA for any news. As soon as there's any updates, we'll let you know in the thread.
In the meantime, don't hesitate to let us know if there's anything else we can help you with.
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