Today’s Question: Is it really true that it is totally safe to delete the previews file for a catalog in Lightroom Classic? Is there no problem at all caused by doing so?
Tim’s Quick Answer: Yes, it is perfectly safe to delete the file that contains your standard previews for Lightroom Classic. The only drawback is that the experience of browsing your photos will be slower due to the lack of previews, though they will be generated as you work.
More Detail: You can think of the previews for photos in your Lightroom Classic catalog as being merely a cache that helps improve browsing performance. When standard previews have been generated for photos, it is much faster to browse those images in the Library module because the smaller JPEG previews can be loaded rather than rendering based on the full raw capture, for example. Without previews, you might initially see no image at all, then a low-resolution image based on an embedded preview, and then a normal image once the standard preview has been created.
As a result of the previews being a cache for improved performance, it is perfectly safe to delete the file containing the standard previews. For example, you may need to quickly recover hard drive space or there may be issues with corrupted previews.
If you want to delete the previews file, first navigate to the folder containing your catalog. From within Lightroom Classic you can go to the Catalog Settings dialog (from the Edit menu on Windows or the Lightroom Classic menu on Macintosh) and select the General tab. Click the Show button to the right of the displayed path for the catalog files, which will bring up a window in your operating system with the folder containing your catalog files highlighted.
Open the highlighted folder, and look for the file that has the same base filename as the primary catalog file (that’s the one with the .lrcat filename extension), but with “Previews” appended to the base filename. For example, if your primary catalog file is named “My Lightroom Classic Catalog.lrcat” the file containing the standard previews will be called “My Lightroom Classic Catalog Previews.lrdata”.
I recommend that you first quit Lightroom Classic, at which point you can delete that previews file. Don’t forget to empty the Recycle Bin (Windows) or Trash (Macintosh) to actually free up the hard drive space from the deleted previews file.
You can then launch Lightroom Classic again. Just note that initially there won’t be any previews available, but they will be generated as you browse your photos. That will cause the browsing experience to be slower until previews have been built. For example, if you browse a folder and wait for Lightroom Classic to generate previews for all images in that folder, the browsing experience will be fast again. But when you navigate to another folder that doesn’t have previews yet, the browsing will be slower until previews have been built.

