A quick fix could be hitting F5 on your keyboard and refreshing the page.
Your browser cache is a temporary storage location in your PC that contains files that are downloaded by your browser in order to display websites.
These files include any documents that make up a website such as:
- HTML files
- CSS style sheets
- JavaScript
- Graphical images
- Multimedia content
Clear your browser cache
NOTE: Restart your browser after following these steps. Websites might take a little longer to load the first time you visit them after clearing your browser cache because your browser will need to download the files required to display the website correctly.
Windows
Google Chrome
- Open Google chrome and press Ctrl+Shift+Delete together
- Select a time range and uncheck all the boxes except for 'Cached images and files'
Microsoft Edge
- Open Microsoft Edge and press Ctrl+Shift+Delete together
- Select a time range and uncheck all of the boxes except for 'Cached images and files'
Mozilla Firefox
- Open Firefox and press Ctrl+Shift+Delete together
- Select a time range and uncheck all the boxes except for 'Cache'
Mac
Safari
- In the Safari menu bar, click 'Safari'
- Select 'Preferences' and click the 'Advanced' tab
- Check the 'Show Develop menu in menu bar' box
- Click the 'Develop' tab and select 'Empty Caches'
Google Chrome
- On the Chrome menu bar, click the 'Chrome' option
- Select 'Clear browsing data'
- Select the time range and check 'Cookies and other site data' and 'Cached images and files'
What next?
Now you've successfully cleared your browser cache, reload the web page again. If this doesn't work, and the page still isn't loading fully, give some connection steps a try.