Continued corespotlightd process CPU overload issues

I am wondering if anyone has discovered any new ideas for stopping the corespotlightd process from hogging the CPU. According to Activity Monitor, the corespotlightd process often occupies more than 100% of the CPU load, sometimes spiking as high as 400% on my M2 Ultra Mac Studio. This problem has become so severe that it often pinwheels under normally non-intensive tasks. It can cause the video to flicker on my Studio Display. In one case it caused my Mac to kernel panic (crash).


I encountered this bug only after installing Sequoia 15.2, but having researched this issue extensively, I find that Mac users have identified it since at least macOS Ventura. So here are some solutions we don't need to hear again:


Reindexing Spotlight by adding and removing volumes in Spotlight Privacy. This provides relief only temporarily. Within hours the process is again grinding the Mac to a halt.


Killing the corespotlightd in Activity Monitor. Again, this is at best only a temporary solution as the process will reinstate itself.


A "clean" install of macOS. First of all, no such process really exists. The OS recovery process simply reinstalls a new copy of the System files. Nobody reports this as a fix. An internal drive wipe and reformat, and restore from Time Machine is also unlikely to help, as it simply returns your Mac to its previous state. If the corespotlightd problem results from a corrupted file, the problem will likely simply be recreated in your reinstall. "Nuke and pave" might solve the problem if it caused by a format or directory issue on your startup volume. This does not seem to be the case, but if anyone has permanently cured the problem by this method, please report it.


What we do need to hear is from anyone who has spent time with Apple Support on this issue and been provided with solutions that actually work, or has new ideas about what causes it. Feels like we're on our own here, since Apple seems to be stumped.



Posted on Dec 19, 2024 11:21 AM

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Posted on Jan 29, 2026 6:33 PM

I had this, in a major way. Activity Monitor showed greater that 100% CPU at ALL TIMES. My 2022 M2 became unusable, freezing, pinwheeling etc. Just like all these descriptions. I searched here and in other forums online, and I tried the many suggestions (short of reinstalling the system software). None of the resolutions fixed the issue. Eventually, I read one post that eluded to large Pages docs with many edits, especially those stored on iCloud Drive potentially contributing to the issue. I've been working on a 100+ page town report in Pages. It coincided with the worsening corespotlightd CPU issues, and it has had a truly enormous number of edits. While the doc isn't exactly huge (like 32 mb's?) the number of edits stored in it practically rival the number of atoms in the known universe.


So here's what I did: I created and saved a copy of this file, and also emailed a copy to myself out of caution. Then I moved the copy file (and it's associated files in it's folder) to my desktop, and I checked the "keep downloaded" option... I triple checked that my backup copy was current and working, and then I (terrifyingly) deleted the original file which was the result of hundreds of hours of work. I then restarted my Mac. I opened activity monitor and the issue is completely gone. corespotlightd is now using POINT one percent of my CPU.


My theory is that it was attempting to not just index the file itself, but also every single tiny edit I had done... perhaps as part of the "revert to" feature? Each nudge of a line or copy/paste of a section or tiny movement of an image... it was saving and indexing them all. When I made a copy, all that data was left behind. The new file has no undo's available. And voila, my Mac is working like it should again. What a relief!


Hope this helps somebody out there, because what a terrible experience it was for a while there.

405 replies

Mar 6, 2025 1:57 PM in response to Mitch Stone

Absolutely happening to me-- corespotlightd spilking CPU and system glitching

on brand-new MacBook Pro Apple M4 Pro running 15.3.1

started about 4 weeks after I migrated over. all problem solving failed. reset to factory settings- and no migration. same issue presented. brought back to apple- they did firmware reinstall and set back to factory settings. can now confirm this continues to happen when and only when I am running pages- generally my pages docs are re-edit of forms with numerous past editions. I quit pages and glitching and CPU spikes go away

Mar 9, 2025 9:48 PM in response to ScottRichardson

ScottRichardson wrote:

I just experienced this issue and my ~/Library/Metadata/Corespotlight was 50GB when I first looked, and within an hour it was 60GB in size! I just deleted that, and my caches folder and it appears to have fixed the issue. Thanks for the wonderful folk in here who identified a way to fix it for now.

One thing I've noticed (and the actual figure may differ depending on your system architecture, memory, storage space, etc.) is that once Spotlight metadata gets to a certain size, its growth begins to snowball. On my system, and seemingly on yours, that size is ~50 GB. It might take one of my Intel systems eight or nine days from when I delete all the metadata until it gets to 50 GB, but from there it's rarely more than a few hours before it gets to 60.

May 19, 2025 6:03 AM in response to Mitch Stone

Hi Mitch. I always assumed the issue was related to Pages. But this latest spike persisted for hours even with all apps closed and my SSD and iCloud removed from indexing. [ChatGPT suggested that a corespotlightd spike of >200% (which is happening as I type this accompanied by the SBBoD!) is likely is an indexing loop or bad database, and advised deleting the index in Terminal with sudo mdutil -E /. 


I did this and nothing changed!


So, it’s now 4 hours later . . .  during that time, I reinstalled Sequoia and after logging back in, corespotlightd did its spiky thing for around 15 mins and now, finally, all is back to normal. Activity Monitor is reporting that 97% of CPU is free and just a few Efficiency Cores are ticking over as I write this in the Notes app. Such bliss: this M4 MacBook Air is such a spectacular machine . . . when it functions normally.


I have not yet opened Pages: before I dare to do that (and risk turning my Mac’s performance back into the MacPlus I owned in 1986), I have placed all the Pages documents upon which I am currently working in a folder called ‘In Progress’ on the Desktop. Using the System Settings Search Privacy tool, I have excluded this folder from Spotlight’s purview (I hope!)


If I need to open any other Pages documents as I work, I will add them to this In Progress folder before I risk opening them!


I will update this post and let folk know if it’s a strategy that works … when I open Pages and start work in the next hour.


BYW, I have reported this corespotlightd problem via Apple’s Feedback web pages for Mac OS and for Pages. Back in 2013, I did the same thing for a process called mdworker (which was also Pages related, in fact it was caused by ONE single Pages document that was full of graphics, originally created in ClarisWorks, whose documents could be imported into Pages.) I was contacted by Apple (by email) and the Pages team asked me to send the Pages file and install a profile on my Mac. I did both, sent Apple the profile file . . . and the next OS update [or it may have been Pages update, I don’t recall] solved the issue. 


That was a pretty niche issue, and yet the Pages Team reached out to me. The current issue is far less niche as it seems to affect anyone who uses Pages. Wouldn’t it be superb, if Apple reached out to one of us for this latest Pages/corespotlightd crisis!

Sep 23, 2025 11:49 AM in response to Mitch Stone

I may have some good news regarding the corespotlightd issue. In Sequoia I had pretty much the same overload issue with corespotlightd that most of you have reported. To resolve it I moved the long Pages document that seemed to be causing the problem from iCloud to my home folder. That cleared up the problem for me.


I recently updated to Tahoe 26. Apple has made a number of important changes to the Spotlight.app. I was curious to see if the overload problem had been addressed. I moved the long pages document back to iCloud. The CoreSpotlight folder increased from about 1.5 GB to about 3.0 GB over a period of 8 hours or so and the Activity Monitor showed corespotlightd working under 10%. My Mac mini M4 remains cool to the touch. I'll report again in a day a two if anything changes, but for the moment I'm much encouraged.

Jan 13, 2026 4:00 PM in response to Zenith

I think it's worse on Tahoe 26.2. I left an iCloud Drive document open in Pages for 1 day and the ~/Library/Metadata/CoreSpotlight/ folder grew from 2GB to 46GB! Activity Monitor shows coresplotlightd 100% in 1 core and 30GB written, kernel 1.26TB, launchd 553GB. DriveDX shows 200TB written to a 500GB SSD in the MBP in only 4 months power on time.

Jan 1, 2025 6:06 AM in response to Mitch Stone

So … a couple of updates:


1). Talked to Apple Support yesterday. They took lots of notes, and have passed the issue on to MacOS engineering.


2). It’s been 3 days since I turned off Apple Intelligence on my iMac, and it has returned to normal operation - it took about 24 hours for things to settle down (I was seeing spikes in corespotlightd, but it would come down off them). Since then it’s been behaving itself.


3). Regarding the system CPU usage spikes, I was seeing some spikes of processes like kernel_task when things got into a really hairy state. I suspect this is related to resource allocation issues where corespotlightd may have been demanding exclusive access to particular resources and then getting into the weeds. (This would also explain the escalating stuck process count in top, now that I think about it).

Jan 1, 2025 8:59 AM in response to MgS_2012

The variety of ways this bug can be triggered is a curiosity, and I'd think for Apple's troubleshooters, provides clues. I can reliably trigger it on my Mac by opening a large Pages file, but it crops up randomly too. I've read elsewhere that Spotlight indexing is triggered after each Time Machine backup session. My Mac had to be restarted this morning due to an overnight power failure, and right off the bat the corespotlightd process ran amok. A Time Machine backup was also initiated on restart. A few minutes after Time Machine was done, the process dropped into the background. So, perhaps something to this.


And those of us who now watch Activity Monitor like others watch Netflix have noticed from the graph that when this process goes nuts it can get into a beat, spiking about every five seconds. This can go on for quite a while before it gives up on whatever it is trying to do and settles down. Another clue, perhaps?

MgS_2012 wrote:

So … a couple of updates:

1). Talked to Apple Support yesterday. They took lots of notes, and have passed the issue on to MacOS engineering.

2). It’s been 3 days since I turned off Apple Intelligence on my iMac, and it has returned to normal operation - it took about 24 hours for things to settle down (I was seeing spikes in corespotlightd, but it would come down off them). Since then it’s been behaving itself.

3). Regarding the system CPU usage spikes, I was seeing some spikes of processes like kernel_task when things got into a really hairy state. I suspect this is related to resource allocation issues where corespotlightd may have been demanding exclusive access to particular resources and then getting into the weeds. (This would also explain the escalating stuck process count in top, now that I think about it).


Feb 8, 2025 6:22 PM in response to Mitch Stone

I'm chiming in to document very similar issues and use-case scenarios. Lots of Pages docs open through iCloud storage (grad school student). I started noticing the slow down occurrences in the fast 2 weeks, with growing regularity. I've been running 15.3 for most of that time I believe. The effects show up across every app. The most drastic occurrences seem to be in my Notes app. I've got tons of notes, a few collaborative, some small, some large. I often get a slow down while typing in notes, and regularly have the app freeze on me and require a forced quit of the Notes. Pages has had those slow blips, but never a full freeze and force quit.

I've disabled Apple Intelligence, and switched off the option of sharing Spotlight data with Apple. It seems that has kept the identical "corespotlightd" process from overloading my system constantly, although I am watching Activity Monitor spike with "corespotlightd" over 100% once in a while.

Feb 10, 2025 7:00 AM in response to Mitch Stone

Just got off a 30 minute phone call with Apple Support. Their engineer team is aware of the issue and have been since February 8th, 2025. The person I spoke to added my case to the engineer team's file on the issue. They are also now aware of this thread. The person I spoke to read everything posted here. The thread itself is also now attached to their file.


I think everyone reading this with the same issue should contact Apple Support so they can have as much information as possible to fix this, in addition to making sure this gets resolved soon enough. They asked me to provide screenshots during the online chat portion, and over the phone they requested me to turn off my VPN (it didn't do anything), turn off and back on iCloud optimization (it didn't do anything), and boot into safe mode (it didn't do anything). They also wanted me to reinstall macOS but I made it clear that wasn't going to happen, and also that in another thread people already tried that in relation to corespotlightd to mixed results.


To do exactly what I did, go to Apple's website. Click Support on the right side of the screen. Scroll down to the section that says "Get Support" (it's quite large with a black button stating "Start Now" and a Memoji underneath). Under "View your products" click "Choose a product". Select your Mac. Click More. Scroll down and click Storage. Click continue. It should give you an option for a call or a chat. I originally opened a chat and clarified immediately what my actual issue was. When she eventually asked me reinstall the OS, I made it clear that I didn't actually expect a fix for this over Support, I simply wanted to get this issue to reach the attention of the people at Apple that could actually get this patched. So she scheduled a phone call for me with her seniors for several hours later at my convenience. (I contacted Support at like 3AM, if you chat with them during normal waking hours you'll likely get a scheduled call much sooner I'm assuming.)


The person I spoke to wouldn't add my case to their file unless I tried booting in Safe Mode to see if the issue was still present, so be prepared for that, or potentially anything else disruptive for them to give your case validity. If you start with a chat that moves to the phone then also have your case number ready because the person on the phone won't have access to your chat log otherwise. The person I spoke to was fantastic so I wouldn't worry about dealing with typical poor customer service like you would from other companies. The call happened 5 minutes after the scheduled time and the chat representative showed up almost immediately.

May 8, 2025 11:59 AM in response to lcjhnsn

tl;dr — trash your ~/Library/Metadata/CoreSpotlight folder


I haven't had a problem since 11 February, when I was running macOS Sequoia 15.3. Then today, I noticed a lag when typing into a Pages document and then a spinning beachball when poking around in a Finder window. I fired up the Activity Monitor; corespotlightd was back to it's old tricks.


macOS Sequoia 15.4.1


Folder/File Sizes:

  • /System/Volumes/Data/.Spotlight-V100 does NOT exist
  • ~/Library/Metadata/CoreSpotlight at 62.45 GB
  • ~/Library/Metadata/CoreSpotlight/SpotlightKnowledgeEvents at 7.4 GB
  • ~/Library/Metadata/CoreSpotlight/NSFileProtectionCompleteUntilFirstUserAuthentication folder at 27.92 GB
  • ~/Library/Metadata/CoreSpotlight/Priority folder at 26.79 GB
  • ~/Library/Caches at 1.85 GB


I do not believe “Optimize Storage” is turned on


Disk Writing:

  • kernel_task had written 4.96 TB
  • mds_stores had written 3.10 GB
  • launchd had written 440.20 GB
  • backupd had written 25.19 GB
  • corespotlightd had written 47.46 GB


Steps to Fix (which is only temporary but not onerous)

12:59 PM —

  • corespotlightd using >300% CPU
  • Pages using 23.1% CPU with two small files open
  • “Data written/sec” was typically sitting at around 180 MB

1:02 PM — trashed the ~/Library/Metadata/CoreSpotlight folder

1:04 PM — 

  • corespotlightd down to 2.5%
  • Pages down to <10%
  • “Data written/sec” is typically staying <1 MB

1:22 PM — com.apple.podcast.SpotlightIndexExtension at 99.6% CPU

1:44 PM — at some point before this time, com.apple.podcast.SpotlightIndexExtension at 0% CPU

May 13, 2025 10:16 AM in response to Mitch Stone

I would like to thank everyone who contributed to this listing, as it would have been impossible to resolve my sequoia/spotlight issue without all of your help. There appear to be two simple actions to eliminate the runaway spotlightd process.

    • Empty the contents of the ~/Library/Metadata/Corespotlight folder
    • Download the contents of the "pages" and "numbers" folders on iCloudDrive onto your computer

NOTE: It has only been two hours since the problem was resolved, but I am confident that it is gone.


I hope you find this useful.

Jun 3, 2025 3:57 PM in response to Mitch Stone

Mitch Stone wrote:

The wide variation of experience with this bug is vexing.

To put it mildly. In my case (which seems to be similar to some people's experiences and wildly dissimilar to others'), I can avoid issues with CPU overload and a host of other problems, including Spotlight search, smart folders in Apple Mail, Time Machine, just to list a few, by the simple expedient of emptying the ~/library/metadata/CoreSpotlight folder on a regular basis (at least on Intel systems; the two Apple Silicon systems I own seem to do their own trash collection, as it were).


But "regular" has seemed to become a shorter and shorter period of late. Example: I emptied the above folder around eight o'clock this morning on my iMac Pro, before going to work. It had been just short of 40 GB before I emptied it. I happened to stop home about two and a half hours later, and the folder had already grown to nearly 30 GB. That's with no iWork apps open at all: not Pages, not Numbers, not Keynote. Which you would think would falsify my own hypothesis about how heavily-edited Pages files, at least, contribute to exacerbating if not actually causing the problem.


And across the room, I've had a large (>55 MB), heavily-edited Pages file open for two days straight on my Mac Studio (while it was also being edited on other systems). At the beginning of that period, CoreSpotlight was at about 27 GB. But after a day, it was down to 9.7 GB (apparently some process is doing what it is likely supposed to do, which is to delete out-of-date metadata). In the day since then, it's grown all the way to 9.72 GB.


If nothing else, these observations support the contention that this issue is much more severe on Intel systems than on Apple Silicon systems. But others with M-series Macs have problems as or more severe than what I experience on my Intel systems, so…who knows?


It would be nice if Apple could ultimately resolve this issue, but given how exasperatingly difficult it has been to even diagnose what reliably causes the problem, I'm not optimistic.

Sep 2, 2025 1:03 PM in response to David MacVicar

[I have iMac 27-in Retina 5K display. 3.8GHz, 8-core, 10th gen, Intel Core i7]


Two points that work for me.  NB: This CPU overload issue seems individualized for different folks/devices.


1. Delete Metadata – I am conservative about what I delete, because I don't know what I'm doing.  I delete only the files which seem to accumulate large data in Metadata.  [Highlite file/folder >Right click > "Info"].  I find only two folders with large data:  CoreSpotlight and one of its larger sub-files SpotlightKnowledgeEvents.  Other files seem negligible in size, and I can ignore them.  They don't seem to change much, ever, or at all.


I highlight and delete the contents of CoreSpotlight all the way "down" to SpotlightKnowledgeEvents.  Then, I delete the contents of SpotlightKnowledgeEvents. Those two folder contain all the accumulated data under Metadata that causes issues.


When I go to my Metadata folder*, I open Metadata folder and find other files and folders (number depends on time lapsed since last delete). Finder > Go > Press "Option" to reveal secret folder "Library" > Metadata >


2. "Duplicate" problematic large Pages files. – This seems to eliminate metadata on the duplicated file, and it's only the large Pages files that seem problematic.  I have one very large file that I work with often.  If I duplicate as needed, my CPU overload issues are not an issue.


I can go days and days with no growth in metadata.  The issue seems resolved… until it's not.  Issue seems revived when I open a new large Pages file, which I've not duplicated.  So, I duplicate that file, and issue goes away.


I rename the duplicated file ending with the date copied, so I can track that.  I send the old file to trash. 


I don't like having to do any of the above, but it seems to work for me, eliminating CPU overload issues.  I'm hoping Apple some day makes the software fix for this issue, because it's very frustrating.  I hope this group can pressure Apple.  If/when I have sufficient time/energy, I will go on social media and creatively whine so loud, Apple might wish they have fixed this issue.  Until then, the above bandage works.


I also check in System Settings (Apple logo top right > System Settings > Storage, which opens "System Data" at bottom.  I get a larger figure, like 132.78 GB, which changes after a 1/2 minute to a smaller figure, like 102.34 GB.  This provides less detailed info, but it's a good match with "Library" folder, and I find it satisfying, when I delete Metadata files and folders, to watch Trash line appear, and then disappear when I empty trash.  I track that daily, so I can note when/whether the Metadata folder are large enough to need deletion.


Continued corespotlightd process CPU overload issues

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