Home
My First Mac



 Help Buying and Getting
 Started with Your New Mac

How Do I Store My iTunes Library on an External Hard Drive?

Intro
I don't know about you, but the single largest set of files on my Mac is my iTunes Library, meaning all my music. And I'm perpetually struggling with having enough free hard drive space, so it makes sense to try to move these files to an external drive.

This article covers the steps of moving your iTunes library to an external hard drive, and discusses why you may want to have an ipod or a second external hard drive at your disposal if you choose to stow away your heavy iTunes library externally.

The good and the bad

One thing that I’m sure many people with limited space on their internal hard drive(s) will find wonderful about storing their iTunes library on an external hard drive is the potentially huge amount of internal hard drive space saved. I know there are some ethically challenged folks with over 100Gbs of music on their drive. You can find out how big yours is by opening iTunes, and chose one of the sub-libraries (Music, Movies and Audiobooks). Now you can read the individual sizes of the sub libraries at the bottom of the window.

An obviously bad thing about having your iTunes library stored on an external hard drive is the inability to listen to your music when the external hard drive is disconnected. The obvious solution to this is to listen to your music from your iPod when your library is disconnected. If you don’t have an iPod, storing your library on a dedicated portable hard drive could solve the problem. However, if you e.g. use your laptop on the couch, this could be a pain, and I therefore recommend the iPod way of getting around this problem.

Moving the tunes
So how do I move my iTunes library? The process can be split into the following five steps:

  1. Getting set
  2. Change library location
  3. Consolidate library
  4. Copy files
  5. Delete old library


Until step 4, this is the official method provided by Apple. But since their method does not move the whole library, we will do something different (step 4).

Getting set

Launch iTunes, and from the iTunes menu choose Preferences. When the preferences window is open, click the Advanced tab (highlighted below). Select the "Keep iTunes Music folder organized" checkbox (highlighted below) and we’re set. You may also want to check the Copy files to iTunes music folder box as well. That will keep you future music imports organized as well.



Change library location

Now, still in Advanced tab, push the “Change” button (highlighted above). An open dialog will pop-up. Navigate to the desired location on your external hard drive, make a new folder for your library, and click the “Open” button in the lower right corner of the dialog. Then click “OK” in the Advanced window.

Consolidate library

What’s left now is to bring your music files together in your library if they aren't already. To do so, From the Advanced menu, choose Consolidate Library. A message appears that says: "Consolidating your library will copy all of your music into the iTunes Music folder. This cannot be undone." Press the “Consolidate” button, and iTunes starts moving music files to your library. Expect this to take a while if you've left your music files strewn all over your Mac.

Move files

Quit iTunes, and open your iTunes folder (default is Users / Username / Music / iTunes). Next, select the files shown below, copy them (shortcut: command-c). Then navigate to your new iTunes folder, and paste them (shortcut: command-v).


Delete old library
First, make sure everything works just as usual. Browse your library, check that no album art is missing, the songs play like they should.
If everything works, delete the old iTunes folder, and you’re done!

My insecure setup
I moved all of my media libraries to my external hard drive recently, but after doing so, I realized that my brand new and extremely space saving setup was seriously insecure. While having a great time finding the best way to move the libraries to an external hard drive, I had completely forgotten about backup.

I only own a single external hard drive, and that meant that my libraries were now on the same hard drive as the backups of the libraries! That left my libraries completely vulnerable to an eventual hard drive failure. I would not recommend having such a setup to anyone, since hard drive failures happen time to time.

As you may have guessed by now, my libraries are at the moment back to their default locations.

The alternative setup
The above mentioned insecure setup can easily be avoided by keeping your libraries and backup on two separate hard drives. If you have an iPod, your library is probably stored there already, and you don’t have any kind of security problem. Other choices could be getting a second external hard drive or to opt for a RAID 1 setup with two disks if you want to save an USB port.

Further Thoughts
If you don't have a spare drive around or hooking up to your laptop is a pain, you can explore some other options. First, if you have an iPod, iPhone or AppleTV and your library fits on there, sync it and leave it on that device to play from. Don't forget there are a wide variety of speakers with remotes to make your life easy in this way.

Next, if you have another Mac (or PC), even an old beater that is not up to much else, you can run your iTunes there, or use it to stream you music to your new Mac via the Shared Music on a network. You may even want to move this old Mac to a room that you'll listen to music more often in.

Lastly, always use your first extra drive as a backup, not only for your iTunes Library, but all your crucial files. This leaves you the option to put music on another device like an iPod and then take it off your Mac.

Got any suggestions or question of your own? Let us know in the Comments section below!

Bjørn Friese is studying Social Science and English in Denmark, and has an ever growing passion for computers and being creative.

 
 

This button is an easy way to let readers bookmark articles on Digg, Del.icio.us, Stumbleupon, Google Bookmarks and other services with a single click. You can find out more about Social Bookmarking here.

CLOSE

 
 
 
 
 
 

CLOSE     

 
 







Your Comments:

Hi - I have a 120GB Macbook that was getting bogged down by a big iTunes library. So.... I didn't research & just moved (copies) all my iTunes folders to a partitioned external drive called "iTunes". I didn't do anything thru preferences & didn't consolidate. Then I sent my Music folder to the trash. (I did back everything up to DVDs 1st PAINFUL!! so I have 2 copies: on the hard drive & on DVDs).

The good news is I freed up lots of space on my Macbook.

The bad news is, I can't use iTunes.

Now, when I open iTunes (on my Macbook & on the external drive), my music files don't appear.

I was thinking I'd just reverse the steps you've given here (& on Apple's support pg at http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1325348

But i'm worried about screwing things up.

Please let me know what you recommend!!


 Cathy
 02/20/2009  at  02:36 PM

I followed these instructions and was able to run iTunes from my external once I had moved my hard drive iTunes files into the trash, so I emptied the trash. After I did so, I could not run iTunes from the external, so I copied files from the external back onto the hard drive. iTunes was once again working okay, but now I had the same disk space issues that prompted me to find this page in the first place. I began the process again from the start, but now, although I can see all of my song files in my iTunes folders (both on hard drive and ext drive), I cannot get iTunes to work on either drive-- it opens with no songs.

To say I am frustrated would be an understatement.


 kelly w
 03/23/2009  at  12:30 PM

I am out of space on my hard drive, I have the option to up grade hard drive or transfer itunes to external hard drive what would be the best thing to do? I will buy a new computer eventually but not now, can I put my I tunes back to my computer once I buy one.


 Marsha
 03/28/2009  at  07:34 AM

Cathy and Kelly: do trial libraries on the external to make sure it's working correctly if you are having trouble. The process should work. Do it with a couple albums so you don't waste a lot of time until it's working properly. Move all your music after you get it right. It's hard to tell what's off on your Mac. Remember, it's not just the music files, it's also the iTunes Library and other files that need to be moved.

Marsha: what Mac do you have? If it's an easy internal upgrade, I'd consider that as externals get tedious over time compared with internal ones.


 Chris Kerins
 03/28/2009  at  08:34 AM

All I want to do is to copy/backup my iTunes library to an external Seegate Free agent 500gb drive


 Colin Hedworth
 03/29/2009  at  09:14 AM

I transferred my music folder from an external hard drive to a 1Tb time capsule. When I disconnect the old drive itunes can't find the files. I changed my music folder location to the time capsule and I've copied all the files to the new location.
When I consolidate the library all files have an !error. can you advise me what I've done wrong?


 Ron
 05/03/2009  at  08:03 PM

This was an amazingly helpful article! I did everything and now have a question... How do I sync my ipod with music as I add it? Everything in my itunes is gone now... I plug in my ipod and it says it's linked with another itunes and can only be linked with one library at a time. How do I keep my ipod up to date?


 victoria Volkman
 05/30/2009  at  03:35 PM

Victoria, you want to first get your iTunes set up just how you want it, then when it says only one library, chose the new one. You will lose what you had on it before, but your new library should be good to go.

Colin, I'd just drag the iTunes folder inside Music to your new drive. Or set up that drive as a time machine drive and back up your whole mac with it.


 Chris Kerins
 05/30/2009  at  07:17 PM

Help ! I followed you directions to the tee. but when I delete my itunes from my computer it also deletes is from my external drive. they seem to be conected somehow. Please what am I doing wrong


 Sandra
 06/04/2009  at  05:24 PM

Hi, I did all the steps above EXCEPT I didn't run iTunes before deleting the files from my internal drive. Now iTunes opens, but it's empty.

I went back to Preferences/Advanced and made sure that it is pointing to the External drive and the folder I set up that does have all the transferred files in it.
Have I missed a step in getting the iTunes program to "see" the music when I open it?


 Christine
 07/30/2009  at  12:33 PM

Page 5 of 7 pages « First  <  3 4 5 6 7 >

Your response:

Name: Email:

Notify me of follow-up comments

Enter the word you see below:


Remember my personal information

Please keep your comments related to the topic. Personal attacks, offensive language or comments containing advertising will be deleted and you may be banned from MFM.

MFM comments are moderated. It may take a few minutes to a few hours before your comment shows up so we can verify it's not comment spam. Sorry, but we receive spammy comments all day long.

Most Popular Help Topics

Mac Link of the Day

iTunes for Mac: Moving your iTunes Media folder

Learn how to move your iTunes Media folder to a different location on your Mac.

-Apple.com

>> Archive