RAM Optimizers: The Scam Still Alive in 2024

Published on May 04, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

There are applications that promise to free up RAM with a single click, selling the idea that Windows doesn't know how to manage its own resources. The reality is simpler: these tools force data to be flushed to the hard drive's page file. Since RAM is much faster than any SSD or HDD, the result is a slower system, not a more agile one.

Icon of digital trash over RAM with red arrow towards slow disk, frozen system, and dropping performance.

How memory management in Windows really works 🧠

Windows 10 and 11 include a memory manager that prioritizes active applications and caches frequently used data. When an external optimizer intervenes, it removes that cache and forces the system to read data from the disk. On computers with 8 GB or more of RAM, this practice is not only unnecessary but also harms performance. The operating system already frees up memory automatically when an app requires it.

My RAM feels empty, better fill it with a scam 🗑️

Seeing the RAM counter at 30% scares certain users, who believe that having free memory is synonymous with speed. It's like buying a 500 HP car and complaining that the engine isn't working at full throttle. These optimizers are the digital equivalent of paying someone to turn off your refrigerator light: you save nothing, but you feel very clever doing it.