Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://code.claude.com/docs/llms.txt Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
Advanced setup
System requirements, platform-specific installation, version management, and uninstallation for Claude Code.
This page covers system requirements, platform-specific installation details, updates, and uninstallation. For a guided walkthrough of your first session, see the quickstart. If you've never used a terminal before, see the terminal guide.
System requirements
Claude Code runs on the following platforms and configurations:
- Operating system:
- macOS 13.0+
- Windows 10 1809+ or Windows Server 2019+
- Ubuntu 20.04+
- Debian 10+
- Alpine Linux 3.19+
- Hardware: 4 GB+ RAM, x64 or ARM64 processor
- Network: internet connection required. See network configuration.
- Shell: Bash, Zsh, PowerShell, or CMD.
- Location: Anthropic supported countries
Additional dependencies
- ripgrep: usually included with Claude Code. If search fails, see search troubleshooting.
Install Claude Code
Prefer a graphical interface? The Desktop app lets you use Claude Code without the terminal. Download it for macOS or Windows.
New to the terminal? See the terminal guide for step-by-step instructions.
To install Claude Code, use one of the following methods:
macOS, Linux, WSL:
curl -fsSL https://claude.ai/install.sh | bash
Windows PowerShell:
irm https://claude.ai/install.ps1 | iex
Windows CMD:
curl -fsSL https://claude.ai/install.cmd -o install.cmd && install.cmd && del install.cmd
If you see The token '&&' is not a valid statement separator, you're in PowerShell, not CMD. If you see 'irm' is not recognized as an internal or external command, you're in CMD, not PowerShell. Your prompt shows PS C:\ when you're in PowerShell and C:\ without the PS when you're in CMD.
Git for Windows is recommended on native Windows so Claude Code can use the Bash tool. If Git for Windows is not installed, Claude Code uses PowerShell as the shell tool instead. WSL setups do not need Git for Windows.
Native installations automatically update in the background to keep you on the latest version.
brew install --cask claude-code
Homebrew offers two casks. claude-code tracks the stable release channel, which is typically about a week behind and skips releases with major regressions. claude-code@latest tracks the latest channel and receives new versions as soon as they ship.
Homebrew installations do not auto-update. Run brew upgrade claude-code or brew upgrade claude-code@latest, depending on which cask you installed, to get the latest features and security fixes.
winget install Anthropic.ClaudeCode
WinGet installations do not auto-update. Run winget upgrade Anthropic.ClaudeCode periodically to get the latest features and security fixes.
You can also install with apt, dnf, or apk on Debian, Fedora, RHEL, and Alpine.
After installation completes, open a terminal in the project you want to work in and start Claude Code:
claude
If you encounter any issues during installation, see Troubleshoot installation and login.
Set up on Windows
You can run Claude Code natively on Windows or inside WSL. Pick based on where your projects are located and which features you need:
| Option | Requires | Sandboxing | When to use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Native Windows | None; Git for Windows is optional | Not supported | Windows-native projects and tools |
| WSL 2 | WSL 2 enabled | Supported | Linux toolchains or sandboxed command execution |
| WSL 1 | WSL 1 enabled | Not supported | If WSL 2 is unavailable |
Option 1: Native Windows
Run the install command from PowerShell or CMD. You do not need to run as Administrator. Installing Git for Windows is optional. It enables the Bash tool by providing Git Bash.
Whether you install from PowerShell or CMD only affects which install command you run. Your prompt shows PS C:\Users\YourName> in PowerShell and C:\Users\YourName> without the PS in CMD. If you're new to the terminal, the terminal guide walks through each step.
After installation, launch claude from any terminal.
-
Without Git for Windows, Claude Code runs shell commands via the PowerShell tool.
-
With Git for Windows, Claude Code uses Git Bash for the Bash tool. If Claude Code can't find Git Bash, set the path in your settings.json file:
{ "env": { "CLAUDE_CODE_GIT_BASH_PATH": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe" } }
When Git for Windows is installed, the PowerShell tool is rolling out progressively as an additional option alongside Bash. Set CLAUDE_CODE_USE_POWERSHELL_TOOL=1 to opt in or 0 to opt out. See PowerShell tool for setup and limitations.
Option 2: WSL
Open your WSL distribution and run the Linux installer from the install instructions above. You install and launch claude inside the WSL terminal, not from PowerShell or CMD.
Alpine Linux and musl-based distributions
The native installer on Alpine and other musl/uClibc-based distributions requires libgcc, libstdc++, and ripgrep. Install these using your distribution's package manager, then set USE_BUILTIN_RIPGREP=0.
This example installs the required packages on Alpine:
apk add libgcc libstdc++ ripgrep
Then set USE_BUILTIN_RIPGREP to 0 in your settings.json file:
{
"env": {
"USE_BUILTIN_RIPGREP": "0"
}
}
Verify your installation
After installing, confirm Claude Code is working:
claude --version
If this fails with command not found or another error, see Troubleshoot installation and login.
For a more detailed check of your installation and configuration, run claude doctor:
claude doctor
Authenticate
Claude Code requires a Pro, Max, Team, Enterprise, or Console account. The free Claude.ai plan does not include Claude Code access. You can also use Claude Code with a third-party API provider like Amazon Bedrock, Google Vertex AI, or Microsoft Foundry.
After installing, log in by running claude and following the browser prompts. See Authentication for all account types and team setup options.
Update Claude Code
Native installations automatically update in the background. You can configure the release channel to control whether you receive updates immediately or on a delayed stable schedule, or disable auto-updates entirely. Homebrew, WinGet, and Linux package manager installations require manual updates by default.
Auto-updates
Claude Code checks for updates on startup and periodically while running. Updates download and install in the background, then take effect the next time you start Claude Code.
Homebrew, WinGet, apt, dnf, and apk installations do not auto-update by default; see below to opt in for Homebrew and WinGet. To upgrade Homebrew manually, run brew upgrade claude-code or brew upgrade claude-code@latest, depending on which cask you installed. For WinGet, run winget upgrade Anthropic.ClaudeCode. For Linux package managers, see the upgrade commands in Install with Linux package managers.
To have Claude Code run the upgrade command for you on Homebrew or WinGet, set CLAUDE_CODE_PACKAGE_MANAGER_AUTO_UPDATE to 1. Claude Code then runs the upgrade in the background when a new version is available and shows a restart prompt on success. The upgrade targets only the Claude Code package and does not affect other software you have installed.
On WinGet the upgrade may fail while Claude Code is running because Windows locks the executable. In that case Claude Code shows the manual command instead. apt, dnf, and apk continue to require a manual upgrade because those commands need elevated privileges.
Known issue: Claude Code may notify you of updates before the new version is available in these package managers. If an upgrade fails, wait and try again later.
Homebrew keeps old versions on disk after upgrades. Run brew cleanup periodically to reclaim disk space.
Configure release channel
Control which release channel Claude Code follows for auto-updates and claude update with the autoUpdatesChannel setting:
"latest", the default: receive new features as soon as they're released"stable": use a version that is typically about one week old, skipping releases with major regressions
Configure this via /config → Auto-update channel, or add it to your settings.json file:
{
"autoUpdatesChannel": "stable"
}
For enterprise deployments, you can enforce a consistent release channel across your organization using managed settings.
Homebrew installations choose a channel by cask name instead of this setting: claude-code tracks stable and claude-code@latest tracks latest.
Pin a minimum version
The minimumVersion setting establishes a floor. Background auto-updates and claude update refuse to install any version below this value, so moving to the "stable" channel does not downgrade you if you are already on a newer "latest" build.
Switching from "latest" to "stable" via /config prompts you to either stay on the current version or allow the downgrade. Choosing to stay sets minimumVersion to that version. Switching back to "latest" clears it.
Add it to your settings.json file to pin a floor explicitly:
{
"autoUpdatesChannel": "stable",
"minimumVersion": "2.1.100"
}
In managed settings, this enforces an organization-wide minimum that user and project settings cannot override.
Disable auto-updates
Set DISABLE_AUTOUPDATER to "1" in the env key of your settings.json file:
{
"env": {
"DISABLE_AUTOUPDATER": "1"
}
}
DISABLE_AUTOUPDATER only stops the background check; claude update and claude install still work. To block all update paths, including manual updates, set DISABLE_UPDATES instead. Use this when you distribute Claude Code through your own channels and need users to stay on the version you provide.
Update manually
To apply an update immediately without waiting for the next background check, run:
claude update
Advanced installation options
These options are for version pinning, Linux package managers, npm, and verifying binary integrity.
Install a specific version
The native installer accepts either a specific version number or a release channel (latest or stable). The channel you choose at install time becomes your default for auto-updates. See configure release channel for more information.
To install the latest version (default):
curl -fsSL https://claude.ai/install.sh | bash
irm https://claude.ai/install.ps1 | iex
curl -fsSL https://claude.ai/install.cmd -o install.cmd && install.cmd && del install.cmd
To install the stable version:
curl -fsSL https://claude.ai/install.sh | bash -s stable
& ([scriptblock]::Create((irm https://claude.ai/install.ps1))) stable
curl -fsSL https://claude.ai/install.cmd -o install.cmd && install.cmd stable && del install.cmd
To install a specific version number:
curl -fsSL https://claude.ai/install.sh | bash -s 2.1.89
& ([scriptblock]::Create((irm https://claude.ai/install.ps1))) 2.1.89
curl -fsSL https://claude.ai/install.cmd -o install.cmd && install.cmd 2.1.89 && del install.cmd
Install with Linux package managers
Claude Code publishes signed apt, dnf, and apk repositories. Replace stable with latest for the rolling channel. Package manager installations do not auto-update through Claude Code; updates arrive through your normal system upgrade workflow.
All repositories are signed with the Claude Code release signing key. Before trusting the key, verify it as described in each tab.
For Debian and Ubuntu. To use the rolling channel, change both stable occurrences in the deb line: the URL path and the suite name.
sudo install -d -m 0755 /etc/apt/keyrings
sudo curl -fsSL https://downloads.claude.ai/keys/claude-code.asc \
-o /etc/apt/keyrings/claude-code.asc
echo "deb [signed-by=/etc/apt/keyrings/claude-code.asc] https://downloads.claude.ai/claude-code/apt/stable stable main" \
| sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/claude-code.list
sudo apt update
sudo apt install claude-code
Verify the GPG key fingerprint before trusting it: gpg --show-keys /etc/apt/keyrings/claude-code.asc should report 31DD DE24 DDFA B679 F42D 7BD2 BAA9 29FF 1A7E CACE.
To upgrade later, run sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade claude-code.
For Fedora and RHEL:
sudo tee /etc/yum.repos.d/claude-code.repo <<'EOF'
[claude-code]
name=Claude Code
baseurl=https://downloads.claude.ai/claude-code/rpm/stable
enabled=1
gpgcheck=1
gpgkey=https://downloads.claude.ai/keys/claude-code.asc
EOF
sudo dnf install claude-code
dnf downloads the key on first install and prompts you to confirm the fingerprint. Verify it matches 31DD DE24 DDFA B679 F42D 7BD2 BAA9 29FF 1A7E CACE before accepting.
To upgrade later, run sudo dnf upgrade claude-code.
For Alpine Linux:
wget -O /etc/apk/keys/claude-code.rsa.pub \
https://downloads.claude.ai/keys/claude-code.rsa.pub
echo "https://downloads.claude.ai/claude-code/apk/stable" >> /etc/apk/repositories
apk add claude-code
Verify the downloaded key with sha256sum /etc/apk/keys/claude-code.rsa.pub, which should report 395759c1f7449ef4cdef305a42e820f3c766d6090d142634ebdb049f113168b6.
To upgrade later, run apk update && apk upgrade claude-code.
Install with npm
You can also install Claude Code as a global npm package. The package requires Node.js 18 or later.
npm install -g @anthropic-ai/claude-code
The npm package installs the same native binary as the standalone installer. npm pulls the binary in through a per-platform optional dependency such as @anthropic-ai/claude-code-darwin-arm64, and a postinstall step links it into place. The installed claude binary does not itself invoke Node.
Supported npm install platforms are darwin-arm64, darwin-x64, linux-x64, linux-arm64, linux-x64-musl, linux-arm64-musl, win32-x64, and win32-arm64. Your package manager must allow optional dependencies. See troubleshooting if the binary is missing after install.
To upgrade an npm installation, run npm install -g @anthropic-ai/claude-code@latest. Avoid npm update -g, which respects the semver range from the original install and may not move you to the newest release.
Do NOT use sudo npm install -g as this can lead to permission issues and security risks. If you encounter permission errors, see troubleshooting permission errors.
Binary integrity and code signing
Each release publishes a manifest.json containing SHA256 checksums for every platform binary. The manifest is signed with an Anthropic GPG key, so verifying the signature on the manifest transitively verifies every binary it lists.
Verify the manifest signature
Steps 1-3 require a POSIX shell with gpg and curl. On Windows, run them in Git Bash or WSL. Step 4 includes a PowerShell option.
Download and import the public key
The release signing key is published at a fixed URL.
curl -fsSL https://downloads.claude.ai/keys/claude-code.asc | gpg --importDisplay the fingerprint of the imported key.
gpg --fingerprint [email protected]Confirm the output includes this fingerprint:
31DD DE24 DDFA B679 F42D 7BD2 BAA9 29FF 1A7E CACEDownload the manifest and signature
Set
VERSIONto the release you want to verify.REPO=https://downloads.claude.ai/claude-code-releases VERSION=2.1.89 curl -fsSLO "$REPO/$VERSION/manifest.json" curl -fsSLO "$REPO/$VERSION/manifest.json.sig"Verify the signature
Verify the detached signature against the manifest.
gpg --verify manifest.json.sig manifest.jsonA valid result reports
Good signature from "Anthropic Claude Code Release Signing <[email protected]>".gpgalso printsWARNING: This key is not certified with a trusted signature!for any freshly imported key. This is expected. TheGood signatureline confirms the cryptographic check passed. The fingerprint comparison in Step 1 confirms the key itself is authentic.Check the binary against the manifest
Compare the SHA256 checksum of your downloaded binary with the value listed under
platforms.<platform>.checksuminmanifest.json.sha256sum claudeshasum -a 256 claude(Get-FileHash claude.exe -Algorithm SHA256).Hash.ToLower()
Manifest signatures are available for releases from 2.1.89 onward. Earlier releases publish checksums in manifest.json without a detached signature.
Platform code signatures
In addition to the signed manifest, individual binaries carry platform-native code signatures where supported.
- macOS: signed by "Anthropic PBC" and notarized by Apple. Verify with
codesign --verify --verbose ./claude. - Windows: signed by "Anthropic, PBC". Verify with
Get-AuthenticodeSignature .\claude.exe. - Linux: binaries are not individually code-signed. If you download directly from the
claude-code-releasesbucket or use the native installer, verify integrity with the manifest signature above. If you install with apt, dnf, or apk, your package manager verifies signatures automatically using the repository signing key.
Uninstall Claude Code
To remove Claude Code, follow the instructions for your installation method. If claude still runs afterward, you likely have a second installation or a leftover shell alias from an older installer. See Check for conflicting installations to find and remove it.
Native installation
Remove the Claude Code binary and version files:
rm -f ~/.local/bin/claude
rm -rf ~/.local/share/claude
Remove-Item -Path "$env:USERPROFILE\.local\bin\claude.exe" -Force
Remove-Item -Path "$env:USERPROFILE\.local\share\claude" -Recurse -Force
Homebrew installation
Remove the Homebrew cask you installed. If you installed the stable cask:
brew uninstall --cask claude-code
If you installed the latest cask:
brew uninstall --cask claude-code@latest
WinGet installation
Remove the WinGet package:
winget uninstall Anthropic.ClaudeCode
apt / dnf / apk
Remove the package and the repository configuration:
sudo apt remove claude-code
sudo rm /etc/apt/sources.list.d/claude-code.list /etc/apt/keyrings/claude-code.asc
sudo dnf remove claude-code
sudo rm /etc/yum.repos.d/claude-code.repo
apk del claude-code
sed -i '\|downloads.claude.ai/claude-code/apk|d' /etc/apk/repositories
rm /etc/apk/keys/claude-code.rsa.pub
npm
Remove the global npm package:
npm uninstall -g @anthropic-ai/claude-code
Remove configuration files
Removing configuration files will delete all your settings, allowed tools, MCP server configurations, and session history.
The VS Code extension, the JetBrains plugin, and the Desktop app also write to ~/.claude/. If any of them is still installed, the directory is recreated the next time it runs. To remove Claude Code completely, uninstall the VS Code extension, the JetBrains plugin, and the Desktop app before deleting these files.
To remove Claude Code settings and cached data:
# Remove user settings and state
rm -rf ~/.claude
rm ~/.claude.json
# Remove project-specific settings (run from your project directory)
rm -rf .claude
rm -f .mcp.json
# Remove user settings and state
Remove-Item -Path "$env:USERPROFILE\.claude" -Recurse -Force
Remove-Item -Path "$env:USERPROFILE\.claude.json" -Force
# Remove project-specific settings (run from your project directory)
Remove-Item -Path ".claude" -Recurse -Force
Remove-Item -Path ".mcp.json" -Force