98

I need to delete all empty folders from my application folder using windows command prompt?

How can I create a bat file like that?

Please help me.

16 Answers 16

161

You can use the ROBOCOPY command. It is very simple and can also be used to delete empty folders inside large hierarchy.

ROBOCOPY folder1 folder1 /S /MOVE

Here both source and destination are folder1, as you only need to delete empty folders, instead of moving other(required) files to different folder. /S option is to skip copying(moving - in the above case) empty folders. It is also faster as the files are moved inside the same drive.

13
  • 3
    OK, this seems great and works! I just don't understand why, if running the cmd from inside the project folder, its giving me "ERROR 32 (0x00000020) Deleting Source Directory" - meaning it can't delete the main directory! Thank god it can't delete it because is not supposed to - its not empty! ("The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process." - where file must be the dir). I'm running inside it with: robocopy . . /s /move.
    – Pedro Reis
    Mar 7, 2017 at 16:21
  • 1
    @PedroReis According to me, you are getting this error as you are trying to delete/move it while the child file/folder is still open. If you need more help, I think it is better to post it as a new question so that others who are facing this issue can find your question and resolve their issue. Mar 7, 2017 at 19:17
  • @VarunSharma I now see that the issue may be that ROBOCOPY is really moving folder1 into folder1; it is not doing the smart thing of checking that if it is for the same position then don't move it at all!; and is really deleting and creating it again. Nevertheless, it does delete the empty folders anyway even with this error... (a bit strange, but it is what I want)
    – Pedro Reis
    Mar 8, 2017 at 8:18
  • @PedroReis Actually, it does not delete and create files. It just changes the address since it is done inside same drive. Try this. ROBOCOPY a 2+ GB file and you can see that it takes less than 2 seconds. It can do this at such speed as it is not actually moving any files but changing file's address in drive file system table. I am not sure if it even changes address and it might just check the address. It takes time only if you are creating copies of files or moving files to different drive. Mar 8, 2017 at 12:24
  • 1
    Robocopy looks like a tempting and simple solution, but it fails to deal with nested empty folders. If you have an empty folder inside an empty folder, you would have to run the Robocopy script twice to remove both. if you have 3 or 4 nested folders then you'll have to run it 3 or 4 times.
    – SS64
    Jul 21, 2017 at 19:58
64

A simpler way is to do xcopy to make a copy of the entire directory structure using /s switch. help for /s says Copies directories and subdirectories except empty ones.

xcopy dirA dirB /S

where dirA is source with Empty folders. DirB will be the copy without empty folders

6
  • 1
    This should be the accepted answer. Nice and simple! Thanks!
    – eckes
    Mar 20, 2013 at 7:19
  • 4
    Adding the /I switch, e.g. xcopy dirA dirB /SI will skip the prompt that says "Does dirB specify a file name or directory name on the target?"
    – user87453
    Jun 8, 2013 at 8:43
  • 32
    I agree this is simple, but I have a directory structure with over 1TB of data. I don't want to replicate that!
    – JYelton
    Sep 18, 2013 at 21:22
  • You could do something similar with RoboCopy and not copy empty folders. I suppose useful if you are copying data, but not if you want to prune empty folders.
    – Sun
    Oct 22, 2014 at 18:33
  • 5
    Also be aware that this doesn't copy hidden and system files - include the /h flag for that Jan 25, 2015 at 19:10
59
for /f "usebackq" %%d in (`"dir /ad/b/s | sort /R"`) do rd "%%d"

from: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/oldnewthing/archive/2008/04/17/8399914.aspx

Of course I'd test it first without deleting before I do that command. Also, here's a modded version from the comments that includes folders with spaces:

 for /f "usebackq delims=" %%d in (`"dir /ad/b/s | sort /R"`) do rd "%%d"

P.S. there are more comments in the blog post that might help you out so be sure to read those too before you try this out

10
  • 2
    I like this one. The link here mentions that this one is easier (similar to the one below): for /f "tokens=*" %%d in ('dir /ad/b/s ^| sort /R') do rd "%%d"
    – Brad W
    Jan 22, 2014 at 22:32
  • Where do you put path to folders?
    – MAGx2
    Apr 8, 2014 at 6:42
  • 1
    @MAGx2 I had this question too. I can't figure out how to post backquotes in the comments, but I'm using ([backquote]dir /ad/b/s "c:\path"[backquote])
    – Jason
    May 6, 2014 at 18:39
  • 1
    If you don't use the line above in a batch file then you need to replace %%d with %d
    – svandragt
    Apr 29, 2015 at 8:03
  • 1
    It can be done easily using ROBOCOPY. See my answer below for details. Sep 13, 2015 at 10:48
17

You don't need usebackq:

FOR /F delims^= %%A IN ('DIR/AD/B/S^|SORT/R') DO RD "%%A"
2
  • 7
    Thanks Tom... you are right. however in a command line it would actually be using a single % opposite to a batch file. Users: note that RD does not delete files nor directory containing files. simply empty directories. So it's totally safe. FOR /F delims^= %A IN ('DIR/AD/B/S^|SORT/R') DO RD "%A"
    – user3326879
    Feb 19, 2014 at 7:12
  • If you are using cygwin, make sure you check your path order, or explicitly point SORT to the dos version.
    – Sun
    Oct 22, 2014 at 18:35
8

Adding to corroded answer from the same referenced page is a PowerShell version http://blogs.msdn.com/b/oldnewthing/archive/2008/04/17/8399914.aspx#8408736

Get-ChildItem -Recurse . | where { $_.PSISContainer -and @( $_ | Get-ChildItem ).Count -eq 0 } | Remove-Item

or, more tersely,

gci -R . | where { $_.PSISContainer -and @( $_ | gci ).Count -eq 0 } | ri

credit goes to the posting author

5

from the command line: for /R /D %1 in (*) do rd "%1"

in a batch file for /R /D %%1 in (*) do rd "%%1"

I don't know if it's documented as such, but it works in W2K, XP, and Win 7. And I don't know if it will always work, but it won't ever delete files by accident.

3

This is a hybird of the above. It removes ALL files older than X days and removes any empty folders for the given path. To use simply set the days, folderpath and drive

@echo off
SETLOCAL
set days=30
set folderpath=E:\TEST\
set drive=E:

::Delete files
forfiles -p %folderpath% -s -d -%days% -c "cmd /c del /q @path "

::Delete folders
cd %folderpath%
%drive%
for /f "usebackq delims=" %%d in (`"dir /ad/b/s | sort /R"`) do rd "%%d"`
1
  • 3
    good one but i have to remove apostrof at the end of last line for /f "usebackq delims=" %%d in ("dir /ad/b/s | sort /R") do rd "%%d" Aug 22, 2016 at 12:49
3

It will be worked fine. This is best way to delete old files and remove empty directories recursively. following .bat file is,

forfiles /p [PATH] /s /m [FILE-PATTERN] /d -[DAYS] /c "cmd /c del @path"
for /f "delims=" %%d in ('dir [PATH] /s /b /ad ^| sort /r') do rd "%%d"

The placeholders needs to be replaced as follows (without the quotation marks):

[DAYS] = Max. age of the files in days, e.g. “10”
[PATH] = Path to search for old files and empty folders, e.g. “C:\Backup\”
[FILE-PATTERN] = Pattern that matches files to delete, e.g. “*.bkp”

The script has been successfully tested under Windows 7 and Windows Server 2003.

2

Install any UNIX interpreter for windows (Cygwin or Git Bash) and run the cmd:

find /path/to/directory -empty -type d

To find them

find /path/to/directory -empty -type d -delete

To delete them

(not really using the windows cmd prompt but it's easy and took few seconds to run)

2
  • Plus ten for including how to just find them.
    – Bob Stein
    Aug 30, 2016 at 13:59
  • In my version of find the first command works, but when adding -delete it says "invalid predicate -delete"
    – OMA
    Mar 14, 2017 at 11:06
1

A more modern and easier solution is:

forfiles /p C:\Path\To\Folder /c "cmd /c if @isdir==TRUE rd @file"

This will attempt to execute rd on all the directories located in C:\Path\To\Folder. Directories that have content in them will not be deleted.

If you exclude /p C:\Path\To\Folder then it'll run in the current directory.

If you add /s (before the /c) then it'll also look in sub-directories.

0
@echo off
set /p "ipa= ENTER FOLDER NAME TO DELETE> "
set ipad="%ipa%"
IF not EXIST %ipad% GOTO notfound
IF EXIST %ipad% GOTO found
:found
echo DONOT CLOSE THIS WINDOW
md ccooppyy
xcopy %ipad%\*.* ccooppyy /s > NUL
rd %ipad% /s /q
ren ccooppyy %ipad%
cls
echo SUCCESS, PRESS ANY KEY TO EXIT
pause > NUL
exit 
:notfound
echo I COULDN'T FIND THE FOLDER %ipad%
pause
exit
0

If you want to use Varun's ROBOCOPY command line in the Explorer context menu (i.e. right-click) here is a Windows registry import. I tried adding this as a comment to his answer, but the inline markup wasn't feasible.

I've tested this on my own Windows 10 PC, but use at your own risk. It will open a new command prompt, run the command, and pause so you can see the output.

  1. Copy into a new text file:

    Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00

    [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\directory\Background\shell\Delete Empty Folders\command] @="C:\Windows\System32\Cmd.exe /C \"C:\Windows\System32\Robocopy.exe \"%V\" \"%V\" /s /move\" && PAUSE"

    [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\directory\shell\Delete Empty Folders\command] @="C:\Windows\System32\Cmd.exe /C \"C:\Windows\System32\Robocopy.exe \"%V\" \"%V\" /s /move\" && PAUSE"

  2. Rename the .txt extension to .reg

  3. Double click to import.
0
0
for /r "D:\Music" /d %F in (.) do @dir /b "%F" | findstr "^" >nul || rmdir %~fF

D:\Fun is the folder that contains empty folders double quotation in the case of space in folder name (no need in this example)

0

The following .cmd is an experiment (that works) to:

  • Deletes empty directories and included "Old"(-1days) files under %temp% & C:\Windows\Temp folders,
  • makes an cmd output log to a .txt file, about fouded & deleted folders/files .

%temp% = C:\Users(user)\AppData\Local\Temp | %userprofile%\AppData\Local\Temp

code:

::  This is a .cmd file
::    Use to:
::        Writes a Log about Temporary files & folders.
::        Cleans 'Windows Temp' folders/files.    (%userprofile%\AppData\Local\Temp  -&-  %windir%\Temp)
::        - a 'Cleaning_LOGs.txt'  will be created or updated in  Documents Library.    (%userprofile%\Documents\Cleaning_LOGs.txt)
::        
@echo off
title Log&CleanTemp

: Set the Path of 'Log file'  (%LogPath% variable)
set "LogPath=%userprofile%\Documents\Cleaning_LOGs.txt"
::  Note: ">> path\file.txt 2>&1" redirects cmd output to <path\to>\<log_file.txt>,    (will be created if does not exist)
::        (if exist, adds the new log at the end of the file, without deleting previous logs)

: Set  'C:\Windows\Temp'  (%WinTemp% var.)
set "WinTemp=%windir%\Temp"

: Seperator [Header] with Date-Time between (any) previous Logs in <log_file.txt>
echo: >> %LogPath% 2>&1
echo ======================================== >> %LogPath% 2>&1
echo %date% - %time% >> %LogPath% 2>&1
echo: >> %LogPath% 2>&1
echo Log Path: %LogPath%  (this text file) >> %LogPath% 2>&1
echo: >> %LogPath% 2>&1

: Report Output & Log
::  Writes a log about temporary files & folders. 
::  Note: ( %temp% = C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\Temp = %userprofile%\AppData\Local\Temp )
::         ( 'WinTemp' = C:\Windows\Temp = %windir%\Temp )
echo: >> %LogPath% 2>&1
echo __________ Empty (0 size) , Old (-1days)  files: >> %LogPath% 2>&1
ForFiles /p "%temp%" /s /d -1 /c "cmd /c if @fsize==0 ECHO @path " >> "%LogPath%" 2>&1
ForFiles /p "%WinTemp%" /s /d -1 /c "cmd /c if @fsize==0 ECHO @path " >> "%LogPath%" 2>&1
echo: >> %LogPath% 2>&1
echo __________ All Old (-1days) files: >> %LogPath% 2>&1
ForFiles /p "%temp%" /s /d -1 /c "cmd /c ECHO @path " >> "%LogPath%" 2>&1
ForFiles /p "%WinTemp%" /s /d -1 /c "cmd /c ECHO @path " >> "%LogPath%" 2>&1
::  Note: "ForFiles"  /p=Path  /s=SubDir  /d=Days(dd)  /c=cmd    "forfiles /?"  for info about command's Variables (@path, @file, etc.)

: Get permissions (unlock files/folders) (OPTIONAL)
::  Uncomment to make it work, IF needed.
::echo: >> %LogPath% 2>&1
::ForFiles /p "%temp%" /s /d -1 /c "cmd /c TAKEOWN /f * /r /d y && ICACLS @file /grant *S-1-3-4:F /t /c /l /q"

: Clean proper files  & Log it
::   Test: ForFiles /p "%temp%\" /s /d -1 /c "cmd /c if @fsize==0 DEL /f /s /q @file" >> "%LogPath%" 2>&1
::        ERROR: Invalid argument/option - '@fsize==0'
echo: >> %LogPath% 2>&1
echo __________ Deleted files: >> %LogPath% 2>&1
forfiles /p %temp%\ /s /d -1 /c "cmd /c DEL /f /s /q @path" >> "%LogPath%" 2>&1
forfiles /p %WinTemp%\ /s /d -1 /c "cmd /c DEL /f /s /q @path" >> "%LogPath%" 2>&1
echo: >> %LogPath% 2>&1
echo __________ Deleted empty directories: >> %LogPath% 2>&1
for /f "delims=" %%d in ('dir %temp%\ /s /b /ad ^| sort /r') do RD "%%d" >> "%LogPath%" 2>&1
for /f "delims=" %%d in ('dir %WinTemp%\ /s /b /ad ^| sort /r') do RD "%%d" >> "%LogPath%" 2>&1
::  Note:  'RD' = Remove-Directory (delete)

: Open Log file
:: this opens the log file    [(my) Documents\Cleaning_LOGs.txt]
explorer.exe %LogPath%

:: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7831286/how-to-delete-empty-folders-using-windows-command-prompt/46617314#46617314

Note that: The trigger to Experiment with this, as part of a 'pre-process', was to prevent the specific (obsolete) driver of the (also obsolete) sound card from automatically reinstalling at each boot. And clean (ghosted) hidden Devices and more other. (...) (this note was just about to get an idea for the use)

So, in a few words: This is the part that cleans up the 'temp' garbage left behind and gives a report.

-1

well, just a quick and dirty suggestion for simple 1-level directory structure without spaces, [edit] and for directories containing only ONE type of files that I found useful (at some point from http://www.pcreview.co.uk/forums/can-check-if-folder-empty-bat-file-t1468868.html):

for /f %a in ('dir /ad/b') do if not exist %a\*.xml echo %a Empty

/ad : shows only directory entries
/b : use bare format (just names)

[edit] using plain asterisk to check for ANY file (%a\* above) won't work, thanks for correction

therefore, deleting would be:

for /f %a in ('dir /ad/b') do if not exist %a\*.xml rmdir %a
2
  • 1
    The test above passes even if the directory is empty. Jan 28, 2016 at 2:43
  • @SteveHollasch thanks for comment, I corrected the code above Jan 17, 2018 at 9:20
-4

This can be easily done by using rd command with two parameters:

rd <folder> /Q /S
  • /Q - Quiet mode, do not ask if ok to remove a directory tree with /S

  • /S - Removes all directories and files in the specified directory in addition to the directory itself. Used to remove a directory tree.

3
  • 2
    It deletes all files, not just empty folders.
    – zhenguoli
    Jul 5, 2021 at 9:31
  • 3
    Format C: would also remove empty folders and would be a even shorter command ;) Aug 2, 2021 at 15:10
  • This is a risky answer since it removes all the files in the folder without confirmation. And this is not an answer to the question since the question asks for empty folders only. Be careful
    – nrofis
    Jul 12, 2022 at 20:52

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