98

When I boot up Android Studio and select "New Project..." and go through creating a new project, I get this popup error:

Failed to import new Gradle project: failed to find Build Tools revision 17.0.0

Consult IDE log for more details (Help | Show Log)

I would love to consult the IDE log, but I haven't even managed to get into the application to do much of anything. I've went through the preferences multiple times to see if I can set a path for the Build Tools, but I can't find much of anything. How do I fix this, or how do I get into the application without opening a project so I can at least see the logs?

1
  • Check the log: .AndroidStudioPreview\system\log\idea.log and JAVA_HOME environment variable Mar 15, 2014 at 19:03

14 Answers 14

96

After spending a few hours: I restarted the Android SDK Manager and at this time I noticed that I got Android SDK Platform-tools (upgrade) and Android SDK Build-tools (new).

After installing those, I was finally able to fully compile my project.

Note: The latest ADT (Version 22) should be installed.

6
  • 5
    In my case I had the correct version of the Android SDK Build-tools installed, but I was looking in the Android SDK that I had been using with Eclipse. Android studio comes with a bundled Android SDK, localed in <ANDROID_STUDIO>/sdk. Start the Android SDK Manager by running <ANDROID_STUDIO>/sdk/tools/android and install the correct version of Android SDK Build-tools and you should fix the problem.
    – andre
    Oct 19, 2013 at 7:44
  • You may want to rename this question to "failed to find Build Tools revision *.0.0"
    – ooolala
    Nov 7, 2013 at 5:22
  • 1
    SDK Manager is found in Windows' programs menu under Android SDK Tools. In the SDK Manager window, there is a 'Tools' heading. Under that you should find various versions of Android SDK Build-tools. Run as administrator so it can manipulate local files.
    – Dale
    Mar 24, 2016 at 13:11
  • Basically what @Dale said. If you click "Launch Standalone SDK Manager" you'll see more options and the Android SDK Build-tools should be in there. Aug 26, 2016 at 0:27
  • This does not address installing older versions of the build tools. See stackoverflow.com/a/39068538/973624.
    – mrtumnus
    Apr 30, 2018 at 15:24
87

As of May 2020, A really straightforward solution using Android Studio:

  1. Open Android Studio
  2. From the top, choose File > Settings > Appearance & Behavior > System Settings > Android SDK
  3. click on the tab SDK Tools at the top. Then highlight Android SDK Build Tools from the list.
  4. Check "Show Package Details" check box, choose the build tools version you need and then click Apply.
6
  • 4
    This is the most straightforward answer as of now. Thanks! Nov 15, 2016 at 22:22
  • saved my day, in my case, 25.0.3 was present there(in SDK) and I had added 25.0.0 in build.gradle(I thought it's latest one)... so changing to 25.0.3 in build.gradle solved the issue Jul 20, 2017 at 6:59
  • This also works in intelliJ. +1 I overlooked the "Show Package Details"
    – lucidbrot
    Nov 1, 2017 at 18:59
  • Tools > Android does not exist as of Android Studio 3.0.1. I can find it under Settings > Appearance & Behavior > System Settings > Android SDK.
    – mrtumnus
    Apr 30, 2018 at 15:24
  • 2
    in 2019, you will find this under File> Settings > Appearance & Behavior > System Settings > Android SDK... Jan 1, 2019 at 15:14
19

Look in the SDK Manager what is your highest Android SDK Build-tools version, and copy this version number in your project build.gradle file, in the android/buildToolsVersion property (for me, version was "18.1.1").

Hope it help!

2
  • Hi. The site's system seems to think that this is a duplicate of this answer, perhaps you could update each to more specifically address each question, or flag the question as a duplicate? Thanks!
    – nanofarad
    Oct 17, 2013 at 22:17
  • 1
    Yes, when I updated to Android 4.4, I forgot to update that section in my build.gradle file. The most current buildToolsVersion is now 19... Nov 4, 2013 at 20:01
8

This is what I had to do:

  1. Install the latest Android SDK Manager (22.0.1)
  2. Install Gradle (1.6)
  3. Update my environment variables:
    • ANDROID_HOME=C:\...\android-sdk
    • GRADLE_HOME=C:\...\gradle-1.6
  4. Update/dobblecheck my PATH variable:
    • PATH=...;%GRADLE_HOME%\bin;%ANDROID_HOME%\tools;%ANDROID_HOME%\platform-tools
  5. Start Android SDK Manager and download necessary SDK API's
1
  • 1
    In particular if you've manually set your $ANDROID_HOME in your bashrc to some other install of the SDK (not the one that comes with Android Studio), the build scripts may get confused. This happened to me on Mac OS X. I had another SDK install in my shell $PATH that messed it up. Aug 9, 2013 at 0:45
5

It happens because Build Tools revision x doesn't exist.

Today, the latest version is 23.0.2 (subject to change all the time).

The buildToolsVersions you want are included in the Android SDK, normally installed in the <sdk>/build-tools/<buildToolsVersion> directory.

Don't confuse the Android SDK Tools with SDK Build Tools.


Change in your build.gradle's buildToolsVersion to some version installed in <sdk>/build-tools

android {
   buildToolsVersion "23.0.2"
   // ...

}
5

Whenever you will try to run a project with build tool version not present in studio, You will face this error.

As of now in 2017, It has been made really simple by Android Studio.

It will prompt you about this issue, along with something like this

A screenshot from Android Studio

A screenshot from Android Studio

You just have to click on it and the system will download to the build version required to run the project.

5
  • Hey @Anuj - Can you add the Image in to the answer itself?
    – garfbradaz
    Jun 27, 2017 at 15:40
  • @garfbradaz According to SO rules, I cannot add images in the answer itself until I have 10 reputations (I am a newbie here:-D ). So once I reach there, I'll update my answer. Thanks for the suggestion my friend. If this answer helps you, You can upvote it. Thanks! Jun 27, 2017 at 15:46
  • My bag matey - ignore me! :)
    – garfbradaz
    Jun 27, 2017 at 15:47
  • Hah.. I expanded the error tree to look for the root source. It shows the error message, so I started searching, and the top answers appear to be wrong nowadays - the version I have doesn't even have the menu options mentioned. But this answer made me go back and look at the root of the error tree, which does have the mentioned link.
    – Izkata
    Jun 24, 2018 at 4:53
  • hell yeah, perfect answer!
    – Dan D.
    Oct 1, 2018 at 21:12
3

I had the API 17 installed but that was not enough. What I really need installed is the "Android SDK Build-Tools 17".

You can locate your "Android SDK Build-Tools X" inside the first child, named "Tools", in the "Android SDK Manager".

3

in your Project perspective, look for Application --> build.gradle and edit this lines

android { compileSdkVersion "android-N" buildToolsVersion "24.0.0 rc1"

like this:

android { compileSdkVersion 24 buildToolsVersion "23.0.3"

1
  • This answer does not make any sense. The question is about how to install build tools.
    – RandyTek
    Jul 26, 2016 at 18:46
2

I had this problem recently, my project didn't include local.properties file.

Check local.properties file if it includes sdk.dir with correct path to sdk

1
  • 2
    It is best to just delete your local.properties. It auto-generates. Dec 7, 2013 at 0:17
1

i think you can download the latest android SDK and use it.i do this and fixed the problem and work well. here is the link: http://developer.android.com/sdk/index.html#download

1

Try to run gradle at the command line first. It might prompt you to setup and environment variable:

export _JAVA_OPTIONS="-Xms256m -Xmx1024m"

Read more here: 1, 2


Further make sure that the Android SDK build tools (adb, aapt, dx, dx.jar) are available in the PATH. If not you can create symlinks at the appropriate locations. They changed with the release of new SDK versions. Here is a shell script which creates the symlinks within the $ANDROID_HOME folder for you.

1

Basically error saying your are missing "Android SDK Build-tools" installed.

1

This worked for me after I tried many solutions:
For some reason the adb process didn't restart itself after installing new packages. Manually killing adb.exe and attempting to import the project another time solved this problem for me.

0

Uninstall the Android SDK Tools and then reinstall them from Tools > SDK Manager.

Screenshot of how to uninstall SDK Tools

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