1639

I have installed nvm (ubuntu with zsh shell) with two node version: v6.11.5 and v9.0.0 and the default version in nvm is the v9.0.0

Every time I need to change the node version

$ nvm list
         v6.11.5
->       v9.0.0
         system
default -> node (-> v9.0.0)
node -> stable (-> v9.0.0) (default)
stable -> 9.0 (-> v9.0.0) (default)


$ nvm v6

How could I change the nvm version default to define v6.11.5?

31 Answers 31

3302

(nvm maintainer here)

nvm alias default 6.11.5 if you want it pegged to that specific version.

You can also do nvm alias default 16 or nvm alias default node.

Either way, you'll want to upgrade to the latest version of nvm (v0.39.2 as of this writing)

# nvm set default node.js version 16.14.2
$ nvm alias default 16.14.2
$ nvm use

$ node -v
# v16.14.2
27
  • 160
    Use nvm alias default node to make the "latest" the default. Mar 24, 2020 at 21:35
  • 68
    Doing nvm alias default doesn't do anything. The tag "default" changes, but a new shell is still using the not-desired-version. I found that uninstalling not needed versions works. May 29, 2020 at 6:30
  • 18
    nvm alias default node to use the latest version of Node installed on your computer. Remember to use nvm use node (or whatever Node version you want to use) after the first command to actually change the version. My example (I was using version 13 as default, but having 15 on machine and wanting to set default to latest version of Node): nvm alias default node nvm use node was like using (in my case): nvm alias default 15 nvm use 15
    – mirapole
    Apr 7, 2021 at 17:15
  • 14
    Might want to just use the latest long-term stable release. nvm alias default lts/* Sep 16, 2021 at 14:25
  • 3
    nvm use with no arguments will use whatever's in .nvmrc.
    – LJHarb
    Nov 19, 2022 at 22:12
203

Lets say to want to make default version as 10.19.0.

nvm alias default v10.19.0

But it will give following error

! WARNING: Version 'v10.19.0' does not exist.
default -> v10.19.0 (-> N/A)

In That case you need to run two commands in the following order

# Install the version that you would like 
nvm install 10.19.0

# Set 10.19.0 (or another version) as default
nvm alias default 10.19.0
3
  • 6
    nvm alias default 10.19.0 Without "v" Mar 19, 2021 at 9:15
  • 1
    it works both with or without the v.
    – LJHarb
    Aug 9, 2022 at 18:18
  • 3
    don't forget to nvm use default as @alltozall20381 mentioned below or start a new shell.
    – David
    Nov 3, 2022 at 4:23
171

This will set the default to be the most current version of node

nvm alias default node

and then you'll need to run

nvm use default

or exit and open a new tab

7
  • 3
    Asked for node 6, your solution will choose the last node stable version to use. So it will not use specific 6 version Sep 9, 2020 at 21:52
  • 2
    Even though this is pretty useful, this doesn't answer the question at all.
    – ljleb
    Feb 15, 2021 at 13:38
  • This gave me a message "Your user’s .npmrc file (${HOME}/.npmrc) has a globalconfig and/or a prefix setting, which are incompatible with nvm. Run nvm use --delete-prefix v15.13.0 to unset it." I ended up running the suggested command and it worked. Apr 1, 2021 at 5:50
  • 1
    Yours is the first answer that tells me to run nvm use default which is what I was missing.
    – MrE
    Oct 25, 2021 at 20:56
  • 1
    This works for me, but only in the same shell. When I open a new one node -v still prints the previous version...
    – Moritz
    Feb 27, 2023 at 8:02
74

If you want to switch only for once use this

nvm use 12.x

Else if you want to switch the default node version then use

nvm use default 12.x 

or

nvm alias default 12.x
61

I was trying to change the default version from a VSCode terminal on a Mac. Didnt work. I had to run this from the default system terminal.

nvm alias default v16.16.0

2
  • Just to clarify, you can also do "nvm alias default v16" and it'll stick to the v16 major version.
    – hernvnc
    Oct 5, 2023 at 18:39
  • After running above command in macos terminal, had to restart my Vscode to see the changes applied in Vscode terminal. Jan 23 at 21:32
45

This is what works for me.

nvm use default v16

This did not do anything for me

nvm alias default v16
2
  • 4
    Notice that the v in v16 matters. Without that it didn't work for me (even though it does when I use nvm use 16).
    – marcelocra
    Aug 30, 2022 at 0:38
  • maybe need to restart the terminal Feb 8, 2023 at 11:04
43

If you just want a major version as default this works:

% nvm alias default 18

To check your current default:

% nvm alias default
default -> 18 (-> v18.12.1)

Restart terminal to apply.

1
  • thanks sir! Worked for me in terminal for mac Jan 8 at 13:40
38

For those testing this in VSCode terminal and still seeing the old version even after killing/restarting terminal -- VS code caches the old version somehow. Close/reopen your full VSCode window and you should see the correct version with node -v.

1
  • I got curious about why this is case, and the best explanation I can come up with is that the vscode process must provide new shells with the $PATH variable it received when it was started. Because nvm works by updating your $PATH, new shells in vscode do not reflect those changes, and a full restart is required Sep 13, 2023 at 19:56
34

nvm alias default 16.10.0(your destination node version)

31

You can also like this:

$ nvm alias default lts/fermium
3
  • Is there any way to target the latest version ? e.g. nvm alias default lts/latest ? Nov 16, 2021 at 10:22
  • 1
    Try with nvm alias default lts/* Nov 19, 2021 at 21:23
  • Note you will need to install lts/fermium first. Plus I find nvm alias default lts/* returns WARNING: Version 'lts/*' does not exist.
    – Jono
    Feb 8, 2023 at 11:43
22

Alert: This answer is for MacOS only

Let suppose you have 2 versions of nodeJS inside your nvm, namely v13.10.1 & v15.4.0

And, v15.4.0 is default

> nvm list
       v13.10.1
->      v15.4.0
         system
default -> 15.4.0 (-> v15.4.0)

And, you want to switch the default to v13.10.1

Follow these steps on your Mac terminal:

  1. Run the command:

    nvm alias default 13.10.1

This will make the default point to v13.10.1 as...

default -> 13.10.1 (-> v13.10.1)
  1. Open new instance of terminal. Now check the node version here as...

node -v

You will get...

v13.10.1
  1. nvm list will also show the new default version.

    nvm list

Just an info: The NodeJS versions taken as example above will have their different npm versions. You can cross-verify it in terminal by running npm -v

2
  • 1
    Excellent step by step, thank you. Works on ubuntu 20.04
    – JasonCoder
    Sep 14, 2022 at 18:33
  • @JasonCoder, oh you're welcome sir! Thanks for pointing out for Ubuntu :) In fact, my answer would work totally well for Linux and Windows systems too. On Windows, the user may do these steps via GitBash. Oct 5, 2022 at 19:03
19

In Nutshell steps to use NVM

For Mac

curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.39.1/install.sh | bash
nvm install 16
nvm use 16
nvm alias default 16
npm install npm --global # Upgrade npm to the latest version

For Linux

sudo apt install curl git
curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_16.x | sudo -E bash -
sudo apt install nodejs

For Windows

Git's installer for Windows from below link

https://git-scm.com/download/win

node-v16.XX.XX-x64.msi from below link

https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v16.x/
17

I did something like that after running a nvm install --lts:

nvm alias default 'lts/*'
1
  • Good answer! nvm install --lts && nvm alias default lts/*
    – Jono
    Feb 8, 2023 at 11:46
14

I tried the most-upvoted answer and didn’t work for me. The problem was that I had another node installed by brew which NVM recognizes as system-node. NVM prioritizes system-node over default alias. All I had to was to uninstall the system-node (brew uninstall node).

2
  • 2
    Same for me on WSL. I didn't have brew so I used ´sudo apt-get purge --auto-remove nodejs´
    – MmM
    Nov 18, 2021 at 13:37
  • @LDW comment did the job for me on WSL as well. Mar 2, 2022 at 3:24
11

First check available versions

nvm list

Then set default version using

nvm alias default lts/**

enter image description here

11

nvm alias default v14.17.5

   mazin ~  nvm ls
           v10.15.1
    ->     v12.19.0
           v14.17.5
           v16.14.0
    default -> 12 (-> v12.19.0)
    node -> stable (-> v16.14.0) (default)
    stable -> 16.14 (-> v16.14.0) (default)
    iojs -> N/A (default)
    unstable -> N/A (default)
    lts/* -> lts/gallium (-> v16.14.0)
    lts/argon -> v4.9.1 (-> N/A)
    lts/boron -> v6.17.1 (-> N/A)
    lts/carbon -> v8.17.0 (-> N/A)
    lts/dubnium -> v10.24.1 (-> N/A)
    lts/erbium -> v12.22.10 (-> N/A)
    lts/fermium -> v14.19.0 (-> N/A)
    lts/gallium -> v16.14.0

     mazin ~  nvm use 14
    Now using node v14.17.5 (npm v8.7.0)

     mazin@zhihongtongxue  ~  nvm ls
           v10.15.1
           v12.19.0
    ->     v14.17.5
           v16.14.0
    default -> 12 (-> v12.19.0)
    node -> stable (-> v16.14.0) (default)
    stable -> 16.14 (-> v16.14.0) (default)
    iojs -> N/A (default)
    unstable -> N/A (default)
    lts/* -> lts/gallium (-> v16.14.0)
    lts/argon -> v4.9.1 (-> N/A)
    lts/boron -> v6.17.1 (-> N/A)
    lts/carbon -> v8.17.0 (-> N/A)
    lts/dubnium -> v10.24.1 (-> N/A)
    lts/erbium -> v12.22.10 (-> N/A)
    lts/fermium -> v14.19.0 (-> N/A)
    lts/gallium -> v16.14.0

     mazin ~  nvm alias default 14
    default -> 14 (-> v14.17.5)

     mazin ~  nvm ls
           v10.15.1
           v12.19.0
    ->     v14.17.5
           v16.14.0
    default -> 14 (-> v14.17.5)
    node -> stable (-> v16.14.0) (default)
    stable -> 16.14 (-> v16.14.0) (default)
    iojs -> N/A (default)
    unstable -> N/A (default)
    lts/* -> lts/gallium (-> v16.14.0)
    lts/argon -> v4.9.1 (-> N/A)
    lts/boron -> v6.17.1 (-> N/A)
    lts/carbon -> v8.17.0 (-> N/A)
    lts/dubnium -> v10.24.1 (-> N/A)
    lts/erbium -> v12.22.10 (-> N/A)
    lts/fermium -> v14.19.0 (-> N/A)
    lts/gallium -> v16.14.0
8

Since there are a lot of answers above that talk about the default alias, and someone still can't get the right version in new terminal, my answer is here.

while you add source $NVM_DIR/nvm.sh in your shell rc file(like ~/.bashrc), it will first check whether there is a nvm-version node path in the $PATH environment variable, like /usr/local/nvm/versions/node/v14.1.0/bin. If there is one, nvm will not use default alias.

So firstly you should check why there is node path in $PATH. If you could get the reason(like run nvm use 16 explicitly in another rc file or script file), just remove it.

If you can't get reason or just wanna keep it, then another solution is:

# that's your previous usage, keep it
source $NVM_DIR/nvm.sh

# FORCE to use default alias
nvm use default

# or if you prefer to forcedly use .nvmrc prior to default, then
test -f .nvmrc && nvm use || nvm use default
7

nvm alias default 16 (where "16" is the version you want to use) but if you're install node from https://nodejs.org/en/download/ before I would suggest you remove it first. For m1 or m1 pro chips, I suggest you follow this solution: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fULL8QiPEU4

5

The current answers did not solve the problem for me, because I had node installed in /usr/bin/node and /usr/local/bin/node - so the system always resolved these first, and ignored the nvm version.

I solved the issue by moving the existing versions to /usr/bin/node-system and /usr/local/bin/node-system

Then I had no node command anymore, until I used nvm use :(

I solved this issue by creating a symlink to the version that would be installed by nvm.

sudo mv /usr/local/bin/node /usr/local/bin/node-system    
sudo mv /usr/bin/node /usr/bin/node-system 
nvm use node
  Now using node v12.20.1 (npm v6.14.10)
which node
  /home/paul/.nvm/versions/node/v12.20.1/bin/node
sudo ln -s /home/paul/.nvm/versions/node/v12.20.1/bin/node /usr/bin/node

Then open a new shell

node -v
  v12.20.1
5

Change the default version to use the latest LTS version nvm alias default lts/*

You manually upgrade the global version by doing nvm install lts/* --reinstall-packages-from=lts/* or a weekly cron job if you want to keep your version up to date

The --reinstall-packages-from=lts/* is there to reinstall the global packages you had everytime you change versions

5

I used the accepted answer like so:

$ nvm alias default 12.22.12

However when I closed and opened the terminal it was always defaulting to the previous verion.

One very important thing for Linux systems at least (I use Fedora), is that you have to restart the machine to take effect. After that, nvm default was working as expected.

2

change the default node version with nvm alias default 10.15.3 *

(replace mine version with your default version number)

you can check your default lists with nvm list

2

#Worked for me 100% Follow this for default node version:

nvm install 12.13.1 then, nvm alias default 12.13.1

2

enter image description here

If your node version (node -v) is => 16.17.0, then run nvm alias default 20.9.0 to have node -v => 20.9.0

1
  • 1
    I find your post so hard to read that I am not even sure whether you actually meant to answer (according to How to Answer). If so, please edit to make it more obvious. Otherwise please delete this.
    – Yunnosch
    Feb 23 at 19:12
1

Make sure to have the correct version of node installed globally. Your company might be using a different version.

1

In my situation of Windows 11, nvm 1.1.9 and using gitbash

These work for me (have to run as administrator)

[lastest version]

nvm use latest

[specific version]

nvm use 18.10.0

These didn't work for me

nvm use 18 -> return node vv18.10.0 (64-bit) is not installed or cannot be found.

nvm use default 18 -> return Unrecognized version: "default"

nvm alias ... -> seems alias command is not supported in this nvm version

Hope it will help :)

1

FYI looks like tmux caches the old version also (like mentioned with VSCode above). restarting tmux then uses the new version for each window.

1
  • 1
    That was it! I had new version of node only in first pane, when I opened new one I got the old version. tmux kill-server helped. Jun 25, 2023 at 17:29
0

For me the issue was, my nvm was not set every time I open a new terminal. Once I got rid of this issue, default node version was also being set fine.

After the nvm was intializing on startup of new terminal, the node version was being initialized to the default set via nvm.Here

-4

nvm alias default <node version>

this will make the <node version> default.

1
  • 6
    The only thing this "new" answer does is to repeat what half of the other answers are already saying, including the accepted answer.
    – Tyler2P
    Jun 30, 2022 at 15:18
-5

While NVM has its uses, I encourage you to consider an alternate option.

You can pin you project to a particular version of Node.js using the node package on Npm!

cd oldProject

npm i [email protected]

cd ../newProject

npm i [email protected]

Next time Npm runs node, it will use that version!

The node package accomplishes this by downloading the specified version of Node.js to node_modules/.bin/node. You you can run it directly, but it is easier to let Npm run it.

Any package.json#scripts will automatically use the specified version of node since node_modules/.bin is added to the path by Npm.

No more remembering which version of Node this package uses. No need to run anything new - just make sure npm i has been run.

{
  "scripts": {
    "node-version": "node --version"
  },
  "dependencies": {
    "node": "9.0.0"
  }
}

Note, you will need to npm install once before the correct node is used:

node --version
# v18.12.0
npm run node-version
# v18.12.0
npm install
npm run node-version
# v9.0.0
node --version
# v18.12.0
node_modules/.bin/node --version
# v9.0.0
0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.