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Fox Hat Nomads
Participant
February 6, 2026
Question

Indesign still crashing on 26 pre release

  • February 6, 2026
  • 1 reply
  • 6 views

I’m following up on an email I sent about a week ago regarding ongoing InDesign crashes.

I’m having difficulty accessing the existing support threads you referenced previously. When I click any of the links in your emails, I’m redirected to a generic home page rather than the relevant discussion, which makes it impossible to review or continue the troubleshooting steps.

Unfortunately, the core issue remains unresolved. InDesign is still crashing while editing text, even when using the latest pre-release versions. At this point the problem has caused me to miss a publishing deadline, which is extremely frustrating and has had a real impact on my work.

I need this issue properly addressed as a matter of urgency. Could you please:

Provide direct, working links to the relevant support threads, or

Escalate this case so we can move toward a definitive fix rather than further testing cycles



I’m happy to provide logs, files, or any additional information required, but I do need a clear path forward.



Thank you for your attention — I look forward to your response.

Kind regards,

Peter

    1 reply

    Bill Silbert
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    February 6, 2026

    If you are still using the same InDesign preference file that you used on the previous version then it would be a good idea to reset your InDesign preferences now. Using old preferences almost always causes problems when using a new version of the program. Resetting preferences returns the program to its defaults. Hopefully, this will help.

    To reset preferences:

    For Macintosh Users: The User Library folder in which InDesign’s preferences are stored is hidden by default on most Macintoshes. To access it make sure that InDesign is closed and click on the desktop to launch a Finder Window (Command-N). With this window in column view follow the path User>Home folder (it’s the folder with an icon that looks like a house—it may have the user’s name rather than “Home”) and click on the Home folder. With the Option Key pressed choose Library from the Finder Go Menu. “Library” will now appear within the Home folder. Within the Library folder find the folder called Preferences and within it find the folder called “Adobe InDesign” and the file called “com.adobe.InDesign.plist” and delete both that folder and that file. When InDesign is next launched it will create new preference files and the program will be restored to its defaults.

    For Windows Users: You can try the quick way of resetting on a PC which is to hold down Ctrl + Alt + Shift when launching InDesign and respond affirmatively when asked if you want to reset. There have been some recent reports that the window asking if you want to reset is not popping up but that the prefs are being reset anyway. If this works great but if it doesn’t you may have to manually delete them.

    To do so:

    On Windows 7 and above the preference files are hidden. To find them go to the Control Panel and open Folder Options and then click the View tab. Then select “Show hidden files and folders” or “Show hidden files, folders or drive options” in Advanced Settings. Then delete (or rename) the folder at the end of this path: C:\Users\<USER>\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\InDesign\<Version #>\<Language>. Make sure that InDesign is closed when you do this. When you relaunch the program it will create  new preference files and the program will be at its default settings.

    The advantage of manually deleting preference files is that after you’ve reset up the program (make sure that no document window is open) to your liking, you can create copies of your personalized “mint” preference files (make sure that you quit the program before copying them—that finalizes your customization) and use them in the future to replace any corrupt versions you may need to delete.