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ToggleYou’ve just wrapped up a 40-hour playthrough of Skyrim, and your character’s looking legendary. But where exactly does that progress live on your system? Whether you’re running the vanilla game or you’ve stuffed your mod folder with 300 plugins, understanding your Skyrim save location is crucial for protecting your progress, managing storage, and troubleshooting issues when things go sideways. This guide covers every platform, Windows, Mac, Linux, and console, so you can find, back up, and manage your saves like you actually know what you’re doing.
Key Takeaways
- Find your Skyrim save location on Windows at C:Users[YourUsername]DocumentsMy GamesSkyrim Special EditionSaves, or use the address bar shortcut %USERPROFILE%DocumentsMy GamesSkyrimSaves for faster access.
- Back up your saves regularly to an external drive or cloud storage like OneDrive or Google Drive, as corrupted saves are unrecoverable and a five-minute backup can prevent losing 40+ hours of progress.
- Modded saves include cosave files (.co2 extension) that contain SKSE data and are tied to specific mods—removing mods mid-playthrough without proper backup can corrupt your save file permanently.
- On Mac, access your Skyrim save location by opening Finder, clicking “Go,” holding Option, and navigating to Library → Application Support → Steam → steamapps → common → Skyrim Special Edition → Saves.
- Console saves (PlayStation and Xbox) automatically sync to cloud storage through PlayStation Plus and Xbox Game Pass, but PC saves require manual backup unless you set up cloud folder syncing.
- If a save won’t load, verify it’s not a game version mismatch (Special Edition vs. original), disable mods to test in vanilla Skyrim, and check file permissions to ensure your user account has read/write access.
Understanding Skyrim Save Files
What Makes Skyrim Save Files Important
Your save file isn’t just a checkpoint, it’s everything. Character stats, quest progress, modded items, follower relationships, house decorations, bounties you’ve accumulated, and every dragon soul you’ve collected lives in that file. Lose it, and you lose hours of work. Corrupt it, and you might not be able to load that character at all.
Skyrim save files are binary data that the game engine reads to reconstruct your exact game state. They’re relatively small (typically 5-15 MB depending on character level and playtime), but they’re sensitive to file system issues, corrupted mods, and accidental deletion.
How Skyrim Organizes Your Saves
Skyrim creates a separate save file for each character you play. The naming convention is straightforward: the game uses the player name or character name plus a timestamp. On Windows and Mac, these files use the .ess extension (Elder Scrolls Save). The game also creates autosaves and quicksaves in the same directories.
Beyond the save file itself, Skyrim stores additional metadata. Cosave files (.co2 extension) contain SKSE (Skyrim Script Extender) mod data if you’re using SKSE plugins. This is why modded saves can fail on unmodded installs, the save expects data that isn’t there anymore.
Save Location On Windows PC
Steam Installation Default Path
If you own Skyrim on Steam (the most common setup), your saves live here:
C:Users[YourUsername]DocumentsMy GamesSkyrimSaves
Replace [YourUsername] with your actual Windows username. This is the default location regardless of where Steam itself is installed. Even if you’ve installed Skyrim on a different drive or SSD, Windows and the game engine still expect saves in your Documents folder.
For Skyrim Special Edition (the remastered 64-bit version released in 2016), the path is nearly identical:
C:Users[YourUsername]DocumentsMy GamesSkyrim Special EditionSaves
Skyrim Anniversary Edition, the 2021 update bundled with creation club content, uses the same Special Edition save directory, there’s no separate folder.
Non-Steam And GOG Versions
If you bought Skyrim from GOG (Good Old Games), your saves location depends on your GOG Galaxy settings. By default, GOG games save to:
C:Users[YourUsername]DocumentsMy GamesSkyrimSaves
GOG Special Edition follows the same pattern as Steam Special Edition. But, if you’ve configured a custom installation path in GOG Galaxy, the save location might differ. Check your GOG Galaxy settings under “Installation” to confirm.
For older pirated or manually-installed versions, the game typically writes saves to the same My Games folder, but this can vary depending on how the executable was launched and what permissions are set.
Accessing Hidden Folders On Windows
Your Documents folder in Windows 10 and 11 shows the “My Games” folder by default. If it’s not visible, you need to enable hidden file viewing. Open File Explorer, click the “View” tab, and check “Hidden items.” Alternatively, press Ctrl+H while in File Explorer to toggle hidden files.
If you’re still not seeing the folder, open File Explorer and type this directly into the address bar:
%USERPROFILE%DocumentsMy GamesSkyrimSaves
Windows will resolve the %USERPROFILE% variable to your actual user folder. This is faster than navigating manually and works even if the folder hasn’t been created yet.
Save Location On Mac
Standard Mac Save Directories
On Mac, Skyrim saves live in your user Library folder. The exact path depends on your Skyrim version:
Skyrim (Original):
~/Library/Application Support/Steam/steamapps/common/Skyrim/Skyrim/Saves
Skyrim Special Edition:
~/Library/Application Support/Steam/steamapps/common/Skyrim Special Edition/Skyrim/Saves
The ~ represents your home directory. On modern Mac systems (Monterey and later), the Application Support folder is hidden by default, which we’ll cover next.
Finding Your Library Folder
The easiest way to navigate there is through Finder. Open Finder, click “Go” in the menu bar, hold Option, and you’ll see “Library” appear as an option. Click it.
Once you’re in Library, navigate to Application Support → Steam → steamapps → common → Skyrim Special Edition → Skyrim → Saves.
Alternatively, open Terminal and type:
open ~/Library/Application Support/Steam/steamapps/common/Skyrim Special Edition/Skyrim/Saves
This opens the save directory directly in Finder. Copy-pasting this is faster than clicking through nested folders.
Save Location On Linux
Steam Proton And Native Linux Support
Skyrim doesn’t have an official native Linux version, but you can run it through Steam’s Proton compatibility layer. Proton translates Windows code to run on Linux, and save files work seamlessly with it.
Your save location on Linux depends on your Steam installation:
Default Steam directory:
~/.steam/root/steamapps/compatdata/72850/pfx/drive_c/users/steamuser/Documents/My Games/Skyrim Special Edition/Saves
Custom Steam library:
If you’ve configured a custom Steam library path, substitute that path accordingly. The key is finding the compatdata/72850 folder, 72850 is Skyrim Special Edition’s Steam app ID.
You can also check your Proton prefix directly. Open a file manager and press Ctrl+L to show the address bar, then paste:
~/.steam/root/steamapps/compatdata/72850/pfx/drive_c/users/steamuser/Documents/My Games/Skyrim Special Edition/Saves
Proton saves work identically to Windows saves because Proton runs the Windows version of the game in a virtualized Windows environment. This means modded saves, cosaves, and all metadata transfer without issues if you switch between Windows and Linux on the same machine.
Console Save Locations
PlayStation Save Storage
On PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5, Skyrim saves are stored in your console’s internal storage or external SSD (PS5 only). You don’t navigate to a folder, the system handles it automatically.
To access your saves:
PS4:
- Go to Settings → Application Saved Data Management → Saved Data in System Storage
- Highlight Skyrim Special Edition
- View or manage your saves here
PS5:
- Go to Settings → Saved Data and Game/App Settings → Saved Data (Console)
- Find Skyrim Special Edition
- Manage saves from this menu
PlayStation doesn’t use file extensions like .ess. Instead, saves are stored in a proprietary format. You can upload saves to PlayStation Plus cloud storage for backup, but you can’t export them to a PC or manually transfer them between accounts without uploading first.
Xbox Save Storage
Xbox One and Xbox Series X
|
S handle saves similarly, but with more flexibility. Saves sync automatically to Xbox Cloud Storage if you’re signed into your Xbox Live account.
To manage saves locally:
**Xbox One/Series X
|
S:**
- Press the Xbox button to open the Guide
- Go to Profile → My Games & Apps
- Highlight Skyrim Special Edition, press Menu button
- Select Manage Game & Add-ons → Manage Saves
- View saves here: you can also upload or download specific saves
Xbox Cloud Saves are convenient because your progress follows you across devices. If you sign into another Xbox console, your saves download automatically. But, local save management is more limited compared to PC, you can’t directly edit or back up Xbox saves to an external drive.
Managing And Backing Up Your Saves
Why Backup Your Game Saves
You don’t realize how valuable a save is until it’s gone. Corrupted saves, mod conflicts, accidental deletion, drive failure, these happen more often than you’d think. A backup takes five minutes and saves you dozens of hours of replaying content.
Backups are especially critical if you’re experimenting with mods. A bad mod load order can corrupt your save, and you’ll want a clean version to roll back to.
How To Manually Backup Your Saves
On PC, navigate to your save folder (using the paths above), and copy the entire Saves directory to another location. Use an external drive, cloud storage, or even a second folder on your computer.
Here’s the simplest approach:
- Open File Explorer and go to
C:Users[YourUsername]DocumentsMy GamesSkyrim Special EditionSaves - Right-click the Saves folder
- Select Copy
- Navigate to your backup location (external drive, cloud folder, etc.)
- Right-click and Paste
Create a dated backup (like Skyrim_Saves_2026-03-23) so you can track when it was made. If something goes wrong, you can restore the folder directly.
Cloud Save Solutions
Cloud services like Google Drive, OneDrive, or Dropbox make backup effortless. Sync your save folder to cloud storage, and your saves are automatically backed up every time the game writes to them.
Setting up cloud backup on Windows:
- Install OneDrive, Google Drive, or Dropbox
- Right-click your Saves folder → Exclude from sync (if using the app’s default folder)
- Alternatively, move the entire Saves folder into your cloud folder (OneDrive, etc.)
- Right-click the original Saves location → Create a symbolic link pointing to your cloud folder
This way, when Skyrim writes to the save location, it’s actually writing to your cloud drive. Changes sync in real-time.
On console, PlayStation Plus and Xbox Game Pass automatically back up saves to cloud storage. It’s worth the subscription just for this feature if you’re serious about protecting your progress.
Troubleshooting Save File Issues
Corrupted Save Files
A corrupted save manifests as a crash when loading, an endless loading screen, or a file that doesn’t appear in your save list even though existing in the folder. Corruption usually stems from a crashed mod, incompatible plugin, or a sudden power loss during save writing.
First, verify the file exists in your save folder. Navigate to your Saves directory and look for the .ess file corresponding to your character. If it’s there but the game won’t load it, try these steps:
- Copy the corrupted save to a backup folder (don’t delete it yet)
- Disable all mods and try loading the save in vanilla Skyrim
- If it loads, re-enable mods one at a time to identify the culprit
- If it doesn’t load, the save is deeply corrupted and likely unrecoverable
There’s no magic “repair save” tool for Skyrim like there is for some other RPGs. Once a save is corrupted, it’s gone. This is why backups are non-negotiable if you’re using heavy mod setups.
Missing Save Files
If your save isn’t appearing in the load menu even though existing in the folder, the issue is usually one of these:
Wrong game version: Skyrim Special Edition saves won’t load in the original game, and vice versa. Check which version you’re running. The Special Edition shows “64-bit” in the launcher: the original shows “32-bit.”
Mod incompatibility: Your save was created with mods that are now disabled or removed. SKSE mods especially can cause saves to fail loading if the mod is missing. Try loading in the exact same mod configuration you used when creating the save.
Permissions issue: The save file might have restricted read permissions. Right-click the save file → Properties → Security tab. Ensure your user account has full read/write permissions.
Cloud sync conflict: If you’re using cloud saves (OneDrive, Google Drive, etc.) and the file is still syncing, wait for it to finish before launching the game.
Save File Size And Storage Management
Skyrim saves grow as your character levels and accumulates items. A new character might be 3 MB: a level 50+ character with thousands of items in containers can be 20-30 MB. This isn’t a storage concern for most players, but it’s worth knowing.
If you’re running low on storage and need to free up space, delete old save files carefully. Only delete saves you don’t need anymore. Keep at least one backup of any save you care about.
Console players don’t need to worry about this, PS5 and Xbox Series X have massive storage pools, and deleted saves still exist in cloud backups anyway.
Using Mods And Save Locations
How Mods Affect Save File Storage
Mods don’t change the save folder location, but they do affect how saves are stored and loaded. Certain mods, particularly SKSE plugins and script mods, embed data into your save file. This means a save created with mods is locked to those mods, you can’t load a heavily modded save in vanilla Skyrim.
When you install a mod, any new saves you create immediately include references to that mod. Removing the mod later will cause the save to fail loading because the game looks for data that no longer exists.
Cosave files (.co2 extension) are the key here. SKSE mods write additional data to cosaves. If you’re running SKSE and several script mods, each save will have a corresponding cosave file in the same folder. Deleting the cosave without deleting the save causes the save to fail.
Managing Mod-Related Save Issues
If you’re experiencing mod-related save corruption or loading issues, here’s the workflow:
Before installing new mods:
- Create a clean save backup in a separate folder
- Document which mods are currently installed
- Make a second backup after each major mod addition
If a save stops loading after adding mods:
- Disable the newly added mods
- Try loading the save
- If it loads, one of those mods is incompatible
- Re-enable them one at a time to find the culprit
If you’re removing mods from an existing save:
- Remove mod scripts and plugins first, then textures/meshes
- Load the save in vanilla Skyrim (no mods) if possible
- Create a new save while in vanilla
- Re-apply your mod setup and load from this new save going forward
The golden rule: never remove mods mid-playthrough without understanding their dependencies. If you’re using a modded save, keep that exact mod setup intact. Many experienced players create a “mod profile” backup documenting their exact load order, so they can recreate the setup if needed.
For detailed mod recommendations and load order guides, sites like Twinfinite offer comprehensive mod testing and compatibility breakdowns. Similarly, GamesRadar+ regularly covers mod updates and stability fixes that affect saves.
Conclusion
Your Skyrim save location depends entirely on your platform, Windows, Mac, Linux, or console, but the principle is the same: once you know where your files live, protecting them becomes routine. Whether it’s backing up to an external drive, syncing to cloud storage, or understanding how mods affect your save, a little knowledge goes a long way.
The most important takeaway: back up your saves. A five-minute backup prevents a 40-hour loss. Especially if you’re running mods or experimenting with controversial changes, keep clean backups at regular intervals. Your future self will thank you when something inevitably goes wrong.
For more in-depth guides on other Skyrim topics, check out the Skyrim Archives – Turbogamerrealm for additional walkthroughs and troubleshooting. And if you need broader gaming guides across platforms, IGN maintains an extensive library of save-related troubleshooting for Skyrim and other major titles. Now get out there and start playing, and back up your progress regularly.





