The Magento cache in Magento 1.X is managed under System->Cache Management

Magento Cache Management Dashboard

<img src=“https://serverguy.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/image2016-6-14-111731.png\” alt=“magento cache management” class=“wp-image-11995”/>

After clicking that link you should see a full list of your caches, similar to below.

The types of caches may vary depending on what extensions/FPCs or even Varnish modules you have enabled.

<img src=“https://serverguy.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/image2016-6-14-11185.png\” alt=“magento cache” class=“wp-image-11996”/>

In the above case, we see this site is using the standard Magento caches alongside Varnish through the Turpentine module. Caches that are invalidated with show up as Invalidated in a red bubble under the **Status **column.

Invalidated is not necessarily bad, it just means the caches are out of date and could be serving older content.

**Read More: **<a href=“https://serverguy.com/magento/magento-2-3-out-now/\“>Magento 2.3 Out Now

Flushing Magento Cache

  • Log into your Magento admin.- Go to the System->Cache Management- Check the boxes on the left for the caches you want to flush

<img width=“270” height=“317” src=“https://serverguy.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/image2016-6-14-112348.png\” alt=“flushing magento cache”>

  1. Select **Refresh **from the actions drop down in the top right

<img src=“https://serverguy.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/image2016-6-14-113430.png\” alt=“flush magento cache” class=“wp-image-11998”/>

  1. Hit **Submit, **those caches are now refreshed/flushed for you.

Alternatively, you can flush every cache by clicking the “Flush Magento Cache”** **near the top right of the Cache Management area.

**Must Read: **<a href=“https://serverguy.com/magento/how-to-hire-magento-developer/\“>Guide on How to Hire a Magento Developer

Flushing Redis Cache

If your site is using Redis-cache, the above methods should still work to clear/refresh the cache. But you can also flush redis specifically on our servers by running this command on our servers via SSH.

$ redis-cli flushall
OK

<a href=“https://serverguy.com/magento-hosting/?utm_source=blog&utm_medium=banner&utm_campaign=Magento\”><img class=“aligncenter wp-image-48848 size-full” src=“https://serverguy.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/1.png\” alt=“Magento- Hosting” width=“753” height=“231”>

Enquire now and join 1000+ businesses who have blitzscaled their websites by choosing ServerGuy as their hosting partner.