- Change the default branch name for a project
- Change the default branch name for an instance or group
- Protect initial default branches
- Update the default branch name in your repository
- Default branch rename redirect
- Related topics
- Troubleshooting
Default branch
When you create a new project, GitLab creates a default branch in the repository. A default branch has special configuration options not shared by other branches:
- It cannot be deleted.
- It’s initially protected against forced pushes.
- When a merge request uses an issue closing pattern to close an issue, the work is merged into this branch.
The name of your new project’s default branch depends on any instance-level or group-level configuration changes made by your GitLab administrator. GitLab checks first for specific customizations, then checks at a broader level, using the GitLab default only if no customizations are set:
- A project-specific custom default branch name.
- Custom group default branch name specified in project’s direct subgroup.
- Custom group default branch name specified in project’s top-level group.
- An instance-level custom default branch name.
- If no custom default branch name is set at any level, GitLab defaults to
main
.
In the GitLab UI, you can change the defaults at any level. GitLab also provides the Git commands you need to update your copy of the repository.
Change the default branch name for a project
Prerequisites:
- You have the Owner or Maintainer role for the project.
To update the default branch for an individual project:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
- Select Settings > Repository.
- Expand Branch defaults. For Default branch, select a new default branch.
- Optional. Select the Auto-close referenced issues on default branch checkbox to close issues when a merge request uses a closing pattern.
- Select Save changes.
API users can also use the default_branch
attribute of the
Projects API when creating or editing a project.
Change the default branch name for an instance or group
GitLab administrators can configure a new default branch name at the instance level or group level.
Instance-level custom initial branch name
GitLab administrators of self-managed instances can customize the initial branch for projects hosted on that instance. Individual groups and subgroups can override this instance-wide setting for their projects.
- On the left sidebar, at the bottom, select Admin.
- Select Settings > Repository.
- Expand Default branch.
- For Initial default branch name, select a new default branch.
- Select Save changes.
Projects created on this instance after you change the setting use the custom branch name, unless a group-level or subgroup-level configuration overrides it.
Group-level custom initial branch name
Users with the Owner role of groups and subgroups can configure the default branch name for a group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Settings > Repository.
- Expand Default branch.
- For Initial default branch name, select a new default branch.
- Select Save changes.
Projects created in this group after you change the setting use the custom branch name, unless a subgroup configuration overrides it.
Protect initial default branches
- Full protection after initial push introduced in GitLab 16.0.
GitLab administrators and group owners can define branch protections to apply to every repository’s default branch at the instance level and group level with one of the following options:
- Fully protected - Default value. Developers cannot push new commits, but maintainers can. No one can force push.
- Fully protected after initial push - Developers can push the initial commit to a repository, but none afterward. Maintainers can always push. No one can force push.
- Protected against pushes - Developers cannot push new commits, but are allowed to accept merge requests to the branch. Maintainers can push to the branch.
- Partially protected - Both developers and maintainers can push new commits, but cannot force push.
- Not protected - Both developers and maintainers can push new commits and force push.
.gitlab-ci.yml
file could be committed to a protected branch and later, if a pipeline is run against that branch, result in exfiltration of group CI/CD variables.Instance-level default branch protection
This setting applies only to each repository’s default branch. To protect other branches, you must either:
- Configure branch protection in the repository.
- Configure branch protection for groups.
Administrators of self-managed instances can customize the initial default branch protection for projects hosted on that instance. Individual groups and subgroups can override this instance-wide setting for their projects.
- On the left sidebar, at the bottom, select Admin.
- Select Settings > Repository.
- Expand Default branch.
- Select Initial default branch protection.
- To allow group owners to override the instance’s default branch protection, select Allow owners to manage default branch protection per group.
- Select Save changes.
Prevent overrides of default branch protection
Instance-level protections for default branches can be overridden on a per-group basis by the group’s owner. In GitLab Premium or Ultimate, GitLab administrators can disable this privilege for group owners, enforcing the instance-level protection rule:
- On the left sidebar, at the bottom, select Admin.
- Select Settings > Repository.
- Expand the Default branch section.
- Clear the Allow owners to manage default branch protection per group checkbox.
- Select Save changes.
Group-level default branch protection
Instance-level protections for the default branch can be overridden on a per-group basis by the group’s owner. In GitLab Premium or Ultimate, GitLab administrators can enforce protection of initial default branches which locks this setting for group owners.
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Settings > Repository.
- Expand Default branch.
- Select Initial default branch protection.
- Select Save changes.
Update the default branch name in your repository
When changing the default branch name for an existing repository, you should preserve
the history of your default branch by renaming it, instead of creating a new branch. This example
renames a Git repository’s (example
) default branch.
-
On your local command line, go to your
example
repository, and ensure you’re on the default branch:cd example git checkout master
-
Rename the existing default branch to the new name (
main
). The argument-m
transfers all commit history to the new branch:git branch -m master main
-
Push the newly created
main
branch upstream, and set your local branch to track the remote branch with the same name:git push -u origin main
-
If you plan to remove the old default branch, update
HEAD
to point to your new default branch,main
:git symbolic-ref refs/remotes/origin/HEAD refs/remotes/origin/main
- Sign in to GitLab with at least the Maintainer
role and follow the instructions to
change the default branch for this project.
Select
main
as your new default branch. - Protect your new
main
branch as described in the protected branches documentation. - Optional. If you want to delete the old default branch:
- Verify that nothing is pointing to it.
-
Delete the branch on the remote:
git push origin --delete master
You can delete the branch at a later time, after you confirm the new default branch is working as expected.
-
Notify your project contributors of this change, because they must also take some steps:
- Contributors should pull the new default branch to their local copy of the repository.
- Contributors with open merge requests that target the old default branch should manually
re-point the merge requests to use
main
instead.
- In your repository, update any references to the old branch name in your code.
- Update references to the old branch name in related code and scripts that reside outside your repository, such as helper utilities and integrations.
Default branch rename redirect
URLs for specific files or directories in a project embed the project’s default branch name, and are often found in documentation or browser bookmarks. When you update the default branch name in your repository, these URLs change, and must be updated.
To ease the transition period, whenever the default branch for a project is changed, GitLab records the name of the old default branch. If that branch is deleted, attempts to view a file or directory on it are redirected to the current default branch, instead of displaying the “not found” page.
Related topics
- Configure a default branch for your wiki
- Discussion of default branch renaming on the Git mailing list
- March 2021 blog post: The new Git default branch name
Troubleshooting
Unable to change default branch: resets to current branch
We are tracking this problem in issue 20474.
This issue often occurs when a branch named HEAD
is present in the repository.
To fix the problem:
-
In your local repository, create a new temporary branch and push it:
git checkout -b tmp_default && git push -u origin tmp_default
- In GitLab, proceed to change the default branch to that temporary branch.
-
From your local repository, delete the
HEAD
branch:git push -d origin HEAD
- In GitLab, change the default branch to the one you intend to use.
Query GraphQL for default branches
You can use a GraphQL query to retrieve the default branches for all projects in a group.
To return all projects in a single page of results, replace GROUPNAME
with the
full path to your group. GitLab returns the first page of results. If hasNextPage
is true
, you can request the next page by replacing the null
in after: null
with the value of endCursor
:
{
group(fullPath: "GROUPNAME") {
projects(after: null) {
pageInfo {
hasNextPage
endCursor
}
nodes {
name
repository {
rootRef
}
}
}
}
}
New subgroups do not inherit default branch name from a higher-level subgroup
When you configured a default branch in a subgroup that contains another subgroup that contains a project, the default branch is not inherited.
We are tracking this problem in issue 327208.