I would like to delete only the files that were created more than 15 days ago in a particular folder. How could I do this using PowerShell?
11 Answers
The given answers will only delete files (which admittedly is what is in the title of this post), but here's some code that will first delete all of the files older than 15 days, and then recursively delete any empty directories that may have been left behind. My code also uses the -Force
option to delete hidden and read-only files as well. Also, I chose to not use aliases as the OP is new to PowerShell and may not understand what gci
, ?
, %
, etc. are.
$limit = (Get-Date).AddDays(-15)
$path = "C:\Some\Path"
# Delete files older than the $limit.
Get-ChildItem -Path $path -Recurse -Force | Where-Object { !$_.PSIsContainer -and $_.CreationTime -lt $limit } | Remove-Item -Force
# Delete any empty directories left behind after deleting the old files.
Get-ChildItem -Path $path -Recurse -Force | Where-Object { $_.PSIsContainer -and (Get-ChildItem -Path $_.FullName -Recurse -Force | Where-Object { !$_.PSIsContainer }) -eq $null } | Remove-Item -Force -Recurse
And of course if you want to see what files/folders will be deleted before actually deleting them, you can just add the -WhatIf
switch to the Remove-Item
cmdlet call at the end of both lines.
If you only want to delete files that haven't been updated in 15 days, vs. created 15 days ago, then you can use $_.LastWriteTime
instead of $_.CreationTime
.
The code shown here is PowerShell v2.0 compatible, but I also show this code and the faster PowerShell v3.0 code as handy reusable functions on my blog.
-
37Thank you for not using alias's. For someone who is new to powershell and found this post through a Google search, I consider your answer to be the best. Oct 22, 2013 at 21:11
-
1I tried @deadlydog's suggestion and no matter if I specify -15 or -35 with varying file creation dates going back months (or recent), it's deleting the entire contents of the directory.– MicheleFeb 14, 2014 at 14:44
-
6If files may be in use it's also worth adding " -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue" to the RemoveItem command. Jul 30, 2015 at 10:21
-
22
-
2The second command in that script always gets an error that Get-ChildItem cannot find part of the path. It gets a directory not found exception. Yet it deletes the empty folders without a problem. Not sure why it's getting an error despite working. Aug 22, 2016 at 18:12
just simply (PowerShell V5)
Get-ChildItem "C:\temp" -Recurse -File | Where CreationTime -lt (Get-Date).AddDays(-15) | Remove-Item -Force
-
-
1
Another way is to subtract 15 days from the current date and compare CreationTime
against that value:
$root = 'C:\root\folder'
$limit = (Get-Date).AddDays(-15)
Get-ChildItem $root -Recurse | ? {
-not $_.PSIsContainer -and $_.CreationTime -lt $limit
} | Remove-Item
Basically, you iterate over files under the given path, subtract the CreationTime
of each file found from the current time, and compare against the Days
property of the result. The -WhatIf
switch will tell you what will happen without actually deleting the files (which files will be deleted), remove the switch to actually delete the files:
$old = 15
$now = Get-Date
Get-ChildItem $path -Recurse |
Where-Object {-not $_.PSIsContainer -and $now.Subtract($_.CreationTime).Days -gt $old } |
Remove-Item -WhatIf
Try this:
dir C:\PURGE -recurse |
where { ((get-date)-$_.creationTime).days -gt 15 } |
remove-item -force
-
I believe the last
-recurse
is one too much, no? The dir listing is recursively, the deletion of the item should not be with childs included, right?– JoostJul 31, 2013 at 0:00 -
If the directory you're working with is two directories deep a second -recurse is needed.– Bryan S.Nov 20, 2015 at 18:45
Esperento57's script doesn't work in older PowerShell versions. This example does:
Get-ChildItem -Path "C:\temp" -Recurse -force -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue | where {($_.LastwriteTime -lt (Get-Date).AddDays(-15) ) -and (! $_.PSIsContainer)} | select name| Remove-Item -Verbose -Force -Recurse -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
-
1
If you are having problems with the above examples on a Windows 10 box, try replacing .CreationTime
with .LastwriteTime
. This worked for me.
dir C:\locationOfFiles -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue | Where { ((Get-Date)-$_.LastWriteTime).days -gt 15 } | Remove-Item -Force
-
1
LastwriteTime
is not the same asCreationTime
,LastwriteTime
is update each time the file is modified. Feb 8, 2019 at 17:08
Another alternative (15. gets typed to [timespan] automatically):
ls -file | where { (get-date) - $_.creationtime -gt 15. } | Remove-Item -Verbose
#----- Define parameters -----#
#----- Get current date ----#
$Now = Get-Date
$Days = "15" #----- define amount of days ----#
$Targetfolder = "C:\Logs" #----- define folder where files are located ----#
$Extension = "*.log" #----- define extension ----#
$Lastwrite = $Now.AddDays(-$Days)
#----- Get files based on lastwrite filter and specified folder ---#
$Files = Get-Childitem $Targetfolder -include $Extension -Recurse | where {$_.LastwriteTime -le "$Lastwrite"}
foreach ($File in $Files)
{
if ($File -ne $Null)
{
write-host "Deleting File $File" backgroundcolor "DarkRed"
Remove-item $File.Fullname | out-null
}
else {
write-host "No more files to delete" -forgroundcolor "Green"
}
}
-
Also, it will never reach the else statement, because if
$Files
is empty it won't enter the foreach statement. You should place the foreach in the if statement.– DieterMay 26, 2015 at 8:16 -
@mati actually it can reach the else statement. We have a similar for loop based on a file list and it regularly enters the for loop with the $File variable as null Jun 29, 2015 at 8:53
-
I'm guessing so- just stumbed across the same script here; networknet.nl/apps/wp/published/…– ShawsonApr 4, 2016 at 9:12
$limit = (Get-Date).AddDays(-15)
$path = "C:\Some\Path"
# Delete files older than the $limit.
Get-ChildItem -Path $path -Force | Where-Object { !$_.PSIsContainer -and $_.CreationTime -lt $limit } | Remove-Item -Force -Recurse
This will delete old folders and it content.
The following code will delete files older than 15 days in a folder.
$Path = 'C:\Temp'
$Daysback = "-15"
$CurrentDate = Get-Date
$DatetoDelete = $CurrentDate.AddDays($Daysback)
Get-ChildItem $Path -Recurse | Where-Object { $_.LastWriteTime -lt $DatetoDelete } | Remove-Item
-
This solution has been posted so many times already. Why are you posting it again? (without at least explaining why you believed your solution is different/better) Aug 26, 2022 at 8:41
-
1Hi. I tested solutions above but they cannot solve the problem in the question. My answer is correct and I want help community for solving the problem. Sep 1, 2022 at 10:57
-
Remove-Item
. For example:robocopy "$($Directory)" "$($Directory)" /S /move /W:5
. The/s
param copies files but not empty directories. In my tests, I have 3m files in 1.4m folders and the entire job takes 16 minutes in robocopy but 43 minutes using Remove-Item.